LEADER 03178nam 2200373zu 450 001 9911027255003321 005 20260212065344.0 010 $a9781951634520 035 $a(CKB)41002195600041 035 $a(IL-JeEL)9941002195600041 035 $a(EXLCZ)9941002195600041 100 $a20250925|2025uuuu || | 101 0 $aeng 135 $aur||||||||||| 181 $ctxt$2rdacontent 182 $cc$2rdamedia 183 $acr$2rdacarrier 200 10$aHistoria y memoria de Tacuara$enacionalismo, violencia y fascismo transnacional /$fCelia Albornoz 210 1$aPittsburgh:$cLatin American Studies Association (LASA),$d2025. 215 $a1 online resource 311 08$a9781951634506 320 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index. 327 $tTacuara: la construcción de un movimiento nacionalista--$tLa violencia política y los enemigos--$tEl género y la construcción de la masculinidad en la militancia de Tacuara--$tTacuara mira hacia Europa--$tTacuara y los neofascismos--$tTrayectorias transnacionales--$tTacuara después de Tacuara. Los caminos se bifurcan 330 $aIn recent decades, and through various channels, interest in the conglomerate of organizations grouped under the generic name of Tacuara has resurfaced. This can most likely be understood within the broader attention given since the beginning of the new century to the phenomena of ideological radicalization and political violence, manifested in the proliferation of journalistic publications, testimonies from protagonists of those experiences, and historical studies. In these years, interpretations of Tacuara tended to link it more with the emergence of armed organizations in the 1970s?in the manner of a prehistory?than with its nationalist predecessors of the 1930s and 1940s. In contrast, the perspectives adopted within the historical discipline, since the 1960s and continuing today, have emphasized the Catholic nationalist, anti-Semitic, anti-liberal, and anti-communist nature of the organization, and its uses of violence. Celina Albornoz's book constitutes a fundamental contribution in this field, as it manages to place Tacuara within the global frameworks that partially explain its trajectory; it sheds light on its links with fascism and neo-fascism; and it describes the transnational journeys of some Tacuarista militants. This attention to the transnational, foundational to the work on this organization, is achieved through a careful study of its development, which includes subnational subsistence areas that had not been previously recognized. The gendered treatment of the construction of masculinity in Tacuara is innovative and insightful. The entire work is extremely valuable and solid, as it is based on meticulous archival work and a use of oral history worthy of the finest goldsmiths. 606 $aNationalism$zLatin America 606 $aPolitical violence$zLatin America 615 0$aNationalism 615 0$aPolitical violence 676 $a982.063 700 $aAlbornoz$b Celina$01850666 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9911027255003321 996 $aHistoria y memoria de Tacuara$94443846 997 $aUNINA