Affiliation:
1. Russian State University for the Humanities
Abstract
In the late 1960s, student protests took place in many countries of the world, which later became part of the Cultural revolution of 1968. This article analyzes the Chilean version of the Cultural revolution — rupturism, which significantly influenced the entire subsequent history of society. Based on interviews with witnesses, as well as newspaper articles, it is concluded that rupturism is largely a mental generational conflict that led to the division of society into supporters of the old value coordinates and the new ones.
Publisher
The Russian Academy of Sciences
Reference24 articles.
1. Barr-Melej P. Psychedelic Chile: youth, counterculture, and politics on the road to socialism and dictatorship. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 2017, p. 344.
2. Huneeus C. La Reforma Universitaria: veinte años después. Santiago, Corporación de Promoción Universitaria, 1988, 109 p.
3. Schlotterbeck M. Beyond the Vanguard: Everyday Revolutions in Allende’s Chile. Berkeley, University of California Press, 2018, 248 p.
4. Martinez S. Entre Lenin y Lennon: La militancia juvenil en los años 60. Santiago de Chile, Mosquito Comunicaiones, 1998, 122 p.
5. Fermandois J. La Revolución Inconclusa, La Izquierda y el Gobierno de la Unidad Popular. Santiago de Chile, Centro del Estudio Publicos, 2013, 851 p.