Rhetorical Witnessing: Recognizing Genocide in Guatemala

Elizabeth A. Flynn Michigan Technological University ; R. Wolf

Abstract

The article explores the rhetorical dimensions of witnessing. We concentrate, in particular, on two groups: 1) university students at the University of San Carlos, Quetzaltenango, whose murals are dramatic reminders of the massacres that resulted in the deaths of over 200,000 indigenous people in the 1980s and early 90s and of the corrupt governmental leaders responsible for them, and 2) U.S. accompaniers sponsored by an organization within our own community, the Copper Country Guatemala Accompaniment Project (CCGAP).

Journal
Community Literacy Journal
Published
2008-04-01
DOI
10.25148/clj.2.2.009490
CompPile
Open Access
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