TY - BOOK AU - Mira Delli-Zotti,Guillermo Claudio AU - Pedrosa,Fernando ED - University of London. TI - Revisiting the Falklands-Malvinas question: transnational and interdisciplinary perspectives SN - 9781908857569 U1 - 997.11024 PY - 2021/// CY - London PB - University of London Press KW - Falkland Islands War, 1982 KW - Historiography KW - Falkland Islands N1 - "Institute of Latin American Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London, 2021"--tp verso; Introduction : state, national identity and power : a historical tour in search of the causes of the Falklands–Malvinas War; Guillermo Mira and Fernando Pedrosa --; Resisting bio-power : ‘laughter’, ‘fraternity’ and ‘imagination’ under dictatorship and the Malvinas–Falklands War; María José Bruña Bragado --; Exile, the Malvinas War and human rights; Silvina Jensen --; Attitudes towards the Falklands–Malvinas War : European and Latin American left perspectives; Fernando Pedrosa --; The Falklands–Malvinas War and transitions to democracy in Latin America : the turning point of 1979–82; Guillermo Mira --; The Malvinas journey : harsh landscapes, rough writing, raw footage; Julieta Vitullo --; Malvinas miscellanea : notes on a diary written while shooting a film in these remote islands; Edgardo Dieleke --; Malvinas, civil society and populism : a cinematic perspective; Joanna Page --; Flying the flag : Malvinas and questions of patriotism; Catriona McAllister --; Leaving behind the trenches of nationalism : teaching the Malvinas in secondary schools in Río Gallegos, Santa Cruz province; Matthew C. Benwell and Alejandro Gasel --; Chronicle of a referendum foretold: what next for the Malvinas–Falklands?; Cara Levey and Daniel Ozarow --; The limits of negotiation; Andrew Graham-Yooll --; It breaks two to tangle : constructing and deconstructing bridges; Bernard McGuirk --; Information resources on the Falkland-Malvinas conflict; Christine Anderson and María R. Osuna Alarcón N2 - "The conflict over possession of the Falklands-Malvinas Islands was waged in an area remote both geographically and geo-politically in an era of cold war and also of tensions within and between sovereign states of the supposed western bloc. It has been broadly perceived as an absurd confrontation, the echoes of which, despite the brevity of its duration, and some four decades on, resonate still not least in the lasting wounds that bear testimony yet to its underlying causes. This book probes the reasons behind the conflict’s tragic occurrence and the processing of its consequences in and beyond the sovereign states that suffered and suffer still from the exacerbating of nationalist identities in the resolution of their differences and the consequent challenges to be addressed. Drawing on perspectives that bring together contributors from markedly differing backgrounds, whether national or disciplinary, this collection reinforces the spirit of critical questioning that historical and sociological research must ever value and pursue. Prejudices and preconceptions are acknowledged and confronted yet contextualised and revised through filters of new questions and answers which are not always anticipated or, for the stubbornly partisan, readily embraced"-- ER -