Publication: ¿Los niños también hacen la revolución"
Loading...
Identifiers
Publication date
Reading date
Event date
Start date of the public exhibition period
End date of the public exhibition period
Authors
Ramírez Palacio, Laura
Advisors
Authors of photography
Person who provides the photography
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
En el marco de la Guerra Civil de El Salvador (1980 - 1992), el material
propagandístico de las guerrillas se valió de la figura del niño
combatiente como pieza central para la consolidación del discurso
y la identidad revolucionaria. Este artículo hace un análisis de la
aparición de la imagen y la voz del niño combatiente en el material
audiovisual que realizaron grupos guerrilleros de El Salvador en
los inicios del conflicto. Se propone revisar estas imágenes no solo
como una evidencia de la existencia del reclutamiento infantil, pero
como una estrategia visual militante, coherente al escenario político
y social del momento.
In the framework of the Civil War of El Salvador (1980 ¿ 1992), the propaganda material of the guerrillas used the figure of the combatant child as a structural piece for the consolidation of the revolutionary discourse and identity. This article analyzes the appearance of the image and the voice of the child in the audiovisual material created by guerillas groups in El Salvador, at the beginning of the conflict. It is proposed to review these images not only as evidence of the existence of child recruitment, but as a militant visual strategy, coherent with the political and social scenario of the time.
In the framework of the Civil War of El Salvador (1980 ¿ 1992), the propaganda material of the guerrillas used the figure of the combatant child as a structural piece for the consolidation of the revolutionary discourse and identity. This article analyzes the appearance of the image and the voice of the child in the audiovisual material created by guerillas groups in El Salvador, at the beginning of the conflict. It is proposed to review these images not only as evidence of the existence of child recruitment, but as a militant visual strategy, coherent with the political and social scenario of the time.




