Hacia un paradigma comunitario en el campo testimonial argentino y chileno
Abstract
Since its institutionalization in 1970, testimonial writing in Latin America has developed along two
main lines: on the one hand, texts in which an intellectual collects and organizes the words of subaltern
subjects; on the other, accounts from the victims of the military dictatorships that took power across the
continent during the twentieth century. This article seeks to lay the foundations for an analysis of a new
configuration of testimonial praxis emerging in contemporary Argentina and Chile, which occupies an
intermediate position between these two categories. In this context, there is no longer a single witness
recounting their experience, or an intellectual acting as mediator; rather, subjects come together to
engage, either directly or indirectly, with victims of state violence and its aftermath. This dynamic fosters
a space of intersubjective relations that ultimately reveals its fundamentally communal nature.
