Main description: Das Ende der Welt, Weite, Wind, riesenhafte Dimensionen undkuriose Gestalten? dies sind verbreitete Vorstellungen hinsichtlich der südlichsten Region des amerikanischen Kontinents.
This book seeks to shed light on the revolutionary process that unfolded under the Popular Unity government in Chile and will also seek to clarify some of the lessons of it.
They Used to Call Us Witches is an informative, highly readable account of the role played by Chilean women exiles during the dictatorship of General Augusto Pinochet from 1973-1990.
En él se relata la historia de la Hacienda y sus diferentes etapas a través de cuatrocientos años, habiendo pasado por las manos de conquistadores, sacerdotes jesuitas, políticos, empresarios latifundistas como mi bisabuelo, don Claudio ...
From the psychomagical guru who brought you The Holy Mountain and Where the Bird Sings Best comes a supernatural love-and-horror story in which a beautiful albino giantess unleashes the slavering animal lurking inside the men of a Chilean ...
New York Times and worldwide bestselling author Isabel Allende returns with a sweeping novel that journeys from present-day Brooklyn to Guatemala in the recent past to 1970s Chile and Brazil that offers “a timely message about immigration ...
"The Edwards's book is an indispensable guide to the policy reforms and mistakes that have taken the [Chilean] economy to its present state."—Philip L. Brock, Money, Credit, and Banking "This book is a 'must' for anybody interested in ...
In the middle of a snowstorm in Brooklyn, 60-year-old human rights scholar Richard Bowmaster hits the car of Evelyn Ortega, a young, undocumented immigrant from Guatemala.
Her vivid ethnography plunges into the moral economy of a society entangled between memory and pardon, revealing the ethical work undertaken by those who accept the present without disclaiming the past.