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2 8 5 Alison J. Bruey is an assistant professor of history at the University of North Florida. She received her PhD from Yale University. She is coauthor of the book Tortura en poblaciones del Gran Santiago, 1973–1990 (2005) and author of articles on Cold War–era neoliberalism, repression, public housing, and popular protest. Her current projects include a book on human rights, neoliberalism, and grassroots activism in Chile and a study of political violence and social movements in Latin America. Ernesto Capello is an associate professor of Latin American history at Macalester College. He received his PhD from the University of Texas at Austin and is the author of City at the Center of the World: Space, History, and Modernity in Quito (2011). He is presently working on two new book projects, one treating commemorative Franco-Ecuadorian cartographic exploration and a second concerning the transhemispheric identities that crystallized during Nelson Rockefeller’s 1969 presidential mission to Latin America. Russell Cobb is an assistant professor of Spanish and Latin American studies in the Department of Modern Languages and Cultural Studies at the University of Alberta . He holds a PhD in comparative literature from the University of Texas at Austin. His previous publications have examined the promotion of the Latin American boom in the United States and the rivalry between the literary magazines Mundo Nuevo and Casa de las Américas. Brenda Elsey is an associate professor of history at Hofstra University in Long Island, New York. Her research focuses on the relationship between popular culture and politics. She is the author of several articles, including one in the Journal of Social History, and a full-length monograph on the history of soccer clubs in Chile, Citizens and Sportsmen: Politics and Fútbol in Twentieth-Century Chile (2011). Her next research project is on pan-Americanism and popular culture. James N. Green is a professor of Latin American history at Brown University and the author of Beyond Carnival: Male Homosexuality in Twentieth-Century Brazil Contributors 2 8 6 C o n t r i b u t o r s (1999) and We Cannot Remain Silent: Opposition to the Brazilian Military Dictatorship in the United States (2010). He is a past president of the Brazilian Studies Association (BRASA) and of the New England Council on Latin American Studies (NECLAS). Christine Hatzky is a professor of Latin American and Caribbean history at Leibniz University in Hannover, Germany. She teaches and specializes in Mexico and Central America and in Cuba and the Caribbean, as well as Africa, especially the Portuguese-speaking countries. Her first book, Julio Antonio Mella (1903–1929): Una biografía, was about the Cuban student leader. Her second book, Cubans in Angola: South-South Cooperation and Transfers of Knowledge (2012), deals with the phenomenon of internationalist solidarity and civil cooperation between Cuba and Angola. Margaret Power is a professor of history at the Illinois Institute of Technology . She is the author of Right-Wing Women in Chile: Feminine Power and the Struggle against Allende and coeditor of Right-Wing Women around the World and New Perspectives on the Transnational Right, in addition to numerous articles. She was a participant in the Chilean solidarity movement in the 1970s and continued her activism in the following decades around Puerto Rico. She is currently working on a project about the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party. Sara Katherine Sanders is a lecturer in history and in gender, women’s, and sexuality studies at Grinnell College. She holds a PhD in history from the University of California at San Diego. She completed her dissertation, “The Dividing Line: Myth, Memory, and Experience in 1968 Mexico,” as a visiting fellow at the University of Oxford International Gender Studies Centre. Her research focuses on student protests and politics in modern Mexico, transnational practices of citizen activists during the Cold War, and female radicals and radical movements in Latin America. Jessica Stites Mor is an assistant professor of history at the University of British Columbia, Okanagan. She was a research affiliate of the Instituto de Historia “Emilio Ravignani” of the Universidad de Buenos Aires from 2002 to 2007 and received her PhD from Yale University. She is coeditor with Claudia Feld of El pasado que miramos: Memoria e imagen ante la historia reciente (2009) and author of Transition Cinema: Political Filmmaking and the Argentine Left since 1968 (2012). Molly Todd is the author of Beyond Displacement: Campesinos, Refugees, and Collective Action in the Salvadoran Civil War (2010). She holds...

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