Gabriel

Gabriel Salazar Vergara (born 31 January 1936) is the Chilean historian from Chile. The historian is well-known in the nation for his work on historical and cultural studies and the interpretations that accompany social movements, particularly recent protests among students of 2011, 2012 and 2006. Salazar was born into a lower class family, he studied history along with sociology and philosophy during his time at Universidad de Chile, and for time he was the assistant to historical historian Mario Gongora and classical historian Hector Herrera Cajas. (1) Salazar used to be part of the Revolutionary Left Movement until 1973. The group also brutalized him by the military in Villa Grimaldi that same year. [2] Having been released from a military prison camp in 1976 , he moved into exile to the United Kingdom. There he obtained a scholarship for further study at University of Hull. He received an PhD on Economic and Social History from that university in 1984. In the following year it was his return to Chile. Salazar had a breakthrough 1985, which is relatively not well-known. Salazar's study subjects were labourers, peons and children Huachos, as well as women. Salazar was one of the founders of Nueva Historia Social, a historical movement. Salazar believes that history is an instrument for the social sphere. In an interview, he declared himself to be a "leftist and critical social historian" and rejected the designation "Marxist" Gabriel Gabriel Gabriel Gabriel

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