This text could be read as if it were a four-part fugue, beginning with the exposition of a subject or motif that will be elaborated and developed in due course. The word fugue derives from the Latin fuga, which means the act of fl eeing or chasing; in the musical sense, voices may be said to chase one another in the course of a contrapuntal composition such as a fugue. The Latin term is also linked etymologically to words such as ‘refuge’ or ‘fugitive,’ all terms indicative of an act of fl ight. The conceptual fugue I am embarking on here uses the basic structure of this musical technique and the metaphor of the musical chase to take the reader through an analysis of the acts of disappearance that took place during the military dictatorshi...
Translated title: Captive Songs Abstract: Cantos Cautivos [Captive Songs] is a digital archive of so...
This is a study of music in, and composition of music for, performance, and of the ways in which mu...
no abstract --- JSTOR link to article (restricted access) https://www.jstor.org/stable/2431819
This paper deals with the question of political disappearance and forced migration as a stimulus for...
In 1964, Brazil suffered a military coup that established a dictatorship in the country until 1985. ...
The Latin American dictatorships in the 1960s and 1970s disrupted the growing mobilization of protes...
This article addresses the long-standing connection between music and social activism in Latin Ameri...
This thesis has presented the organizational factors that made “Nueva Canción” so influential for so...
This thesis examines how diasporic, musical and political identities are performed, contested and re...
Partir de la necesidad de entender los contextos históricos de nuestro continente, debería ser una d...
This dissertation examines the reception, circulation, and production of the Chilean political song ...
In the aftermath of the 1973 coup d’état, Chileans managed to find refuge in more than forty of the ...
Chile\u27s military coup of 1973 resulted in several years of cultural blackout due to repressive po...
At a recent festival of Quechua theatre in Peru, one of the plays took as its theme the widespread d...
The central research question underlying this project is ‘How to express in visual form, the music o...
Translated title: Captive Songs Abstract: Cantos Cautivos [Captive Songs] is a digital archive of so...
This is a study of music in, and composition of music for, performance, and of the ways in which mu...
no abstract --- JSTOR link to article (restricted access) https://www.jstor.org/stable/2431819
This paper deals with the question of political disappearance and forced migration as a stimulus for...
In 1964, Brazil suffered a military coup that established a dictatorship in the country until 1985. ...
The Latin American dictatorships in the 1960s and 1970s disrupted the growing mobilization of protes...
This article addresses the long-standing connection between music and social activism in Latin Ameri...
This thesis has presented the organizational factors that made “Nueva Canción” so influential for so...
This thesis examines how diasporic, musical and political identities are performed, contested and re...
Partir de la necesidad de entender los contextos históricos de nuestro continente, debería ser una d...
This dissertation examines the reception, circulation, and production of the Chilean political song ...
In the aftermath of the 1973 coup d’état, Chileans managed to find refuge in more than forty of the ...
Chile\u27s military coup of 1973 resulted in several years of cultural blackout due to repressive po...
At a recent festival of Quechua theatre in Peru, one of the plays took as its theme the widespread d...
The central research question underlying this project is ‘How to express in visual form, the music o...
Translated title: Captive Songs Abstract: Cantos Cautivos [Captive Songs] is a digital archive of so...
This is a study of music in, and composition of music for, performance, and of the ways in which mu...
no abstract --- JSTOR link to article (restricted access) https://www.jstor.org/stable/2431819