The People's Paving Stones: The Material Politics of International Human Rights in the Baldosas por la Memoria of Buenos Aires

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Abstract

Baldosas por la memoria are memorial paving stones handcrafted by loosely networked activists. Produced continuously from 2006 to an informally established protocol, they memorialize "the disappeared"and others murdered by the state terrorism of the Argentinian dictatorship (1976-1983). As a synecdoche of the "down and dirty"everyday pavements, they function as a metonym for democratic struggle and popular sovereignty. Aesthetically, they work against the "forgetting"and kitschification to which conventional memorials become subject. Through remediation into books and a DVD documentary, they participate in controversies within the international politics of human rights. Using a "material turn"within visual analysis, yet distinct from the "new materialism,"this article explains how they function within familiar genres of memorialization but in wholly novel ways. Baldosas create ethical complexity and moral ambiguity by troubling collective memory. Thus, we examine their relation to guilt, complicity, trauma, and affect.

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Carver, T., Amat, D., & Ravecca, P. (2021, September 1). The People’s Paving Stones: The Material Politics of International Human Rights in the Baldosas por la Memoria of Buenos Aires. International Political Sociology. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/ips/olab009

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