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Abstract
This article approaches the study of the popular protest known as The Trelewazo focusing on the local networks and mediations that shaped its particular form and meanings. The article considers that local approaches to the analysis of popular protests occurred during the sixties and seventies in Argentina, in particular to those known as puebladas o azos, will allow a better understanding of these protests themselves as much as it will illuminate the mechanisms that articulated general processes, such as authoritarian rule and political radicalization, with the everyday life of the inhabitants of the different regions of the country.
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