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So many people have helped during my research and writing journey toward a return to a nation and tragedy that was formative for my family and me. Early in my endeavor, Vivianne Dufour, Arnold Bauer, Adriana Colman, Philippe De Conti, and Milena Leni each played instrumental roles in shaping my thinking about the dictatorship and its traces and remains. I am especially indebted to Roberto Leni Olivares, whose insight, partnership, and identification with the Chilean exilic world gave me permission to finally feel at home.
The University of California, Santa Cruz, provided a wonderful location from which to think about cultural matters. Rosa Linda Fregoso, Juan Poblete, Dana Takagi, John Brown Childs, Melanie Dupuis, Craig Reinarman, and Candace West are exceptional mentors. I am deeply grateful. Herman Gray has been a brilliant intellectual force and a great friend on this journey. His generous presence in my life has been nothing short of intellectually and personally sustaining. To Guillermo Delgado-P., I owe the seeds of this book, as one day during a final exam for his course “Introduction to Latino and Latin American Studies,” we spent two hours scribbling notes back and forth about ideas for a project on memory, ideas he helped come to fruition. A special thanks goes to Tanya McNeill, Veronica López, Sudarat Musikawong, Barbara Barnes, Akiko Naono, and Deb Vargas, who in so many ways supported and entertained me, and always heard me out. At Santa Cruz, I also thank Pat Zavella and Olga Nájera-Ramírez, who were codirectors of the Chicano/Latino Research Center (CLRC) at the time of my dissertation fellowship there. They supported me at a crucial time. The Hemispheric Dialogues project that was led by Juan Poblete, Sonia Alvarez, Manuel Pastor, and Johnathan Fox both influenced and extended my intercontinental thinking. I extend a warm thanks to the Sociology Department at UCSC for a rich and unique sociological imagination and for material support.
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