Journalism and Writing: the Disciples of Walsh

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24215/2314-274Xe034

Keywords:

journalism, writing, gender violence, social memory

Abstract

At the beginning of the sixties, the so-called New Journalism emerges in the United States. A few years before Rodolfo Walsh, in Argentina, writes his paradigmatic work: Operación masacre (1957). In this text, writing is more than the development of information or the presence of the narrator; it is an act of resistance. In the xxi century, this legacy is taken by journalist and writers women who open a path to the theme of gender violence. Their writing, as Walsh did, seeks to recompose the social memory by replacing the voiceless voices, the barely audible and also the missing ones.

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Published

2017-06-29

How to Cite

Falbo, G. (2017). Journalism and Writing: the Disciples of Walsh. Tram[p]as De La Comunicación Y La Cultura, (80), e011. https://doi.org/10.24215/2314-274Xe034