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Documenting the rise and disillusionment of El Salvador's postwar activists in the face of populist authoritarian politics.
The conclusion of El Salvador's long civil war, in 1992, was supposed to bring about equality and political freedom. Leftist insurgents laid down arms, and the government formally embraced liberal ideals. Yet today, El Salvador is ruled by an authoritarian president who came to power via unconstitutional means. What went wrong?
Anthropologist and journalist Ellen Moodie embedded with indignados--young middle-class protestors, demanding that the government live up to its liberal commitments--to better understand the course of political change since the civil war. Yet the "post-postwar" generation is only the latest demographic disappointed with liberalism in practice. Moodie examines a nineteenth-century "racial liberalism" that saw descendants of colonists "civilizing" Indigenous people while dispossessing them of lands and mobilizing them for labor. Today, the failure to make good on the promises of postwar liberalism has inspired robust support for strongman Nayib Bukele. Moodie argues that El Salvador's case, though inflected by local concerns, is not unique. Rather, it is another stark demonstration of how liberalism's imaginary social contract gives rise to populist authoritarianism.
Ellen Moodie is an associate professor of anthropology and the director of Global Studies at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. She is the author of El Salvador in the Aftermath of Peace and coeditor of Central America in the New Millennium.
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