Donatella della Porta is Professor of Political Science, Dean of the Institute for Humanities and the Social Sciences and Director of the PhD program in Political Science and Sociology at the Scuola Normale Superiore in Florence, where she also leads the Center on Social Movement Studies. Massimiliano Andretta is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Pisa. Tiago Fernandes is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Nova University in Lisbon. Eduardo Romanos is a Ramón y Cajal Fellow in the Department of Sociology at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid. Markos Vogiatzoglou works as a Scientific Adviser to the Greek Government's Minister of State.
This book provides important insights for scholars in sociology and political science. A thorough examination of how meanings emerge through historical pathways shows how studying history and memory can assuage the present-oriented bias of current sociological scholarship. -- Timothy Kubal, California State University, Fresno, American Journal of Sociology This rich comparative analysis of the fascinating cases of Southern Europe brings to life and recasts theoretical debates on how memories of the past shape-and are sometimes remade by-ongoing struggles. The fine-grained empirical and theoretical work of Legacies and Memories in Movements will be must reading for students of social movements, memory studies and the intersection of culture and politics. -Robert M. Fishman, Carlos III University, Madrid The past is present as new generations of social movement actors revisit and revive critical junctures in their nations' histories. Through their empirically rigorous and theoretically innovative marrying of collective memory and social movement analysis, the authors of Legacies and Memories in Movements, track the historical twists and varying memory work of activists in Portugal, Spain, Italy, and Greece living and revitalizing their transitions to democracy. An important book that forges new analytical pathways. -Robin Wagner-Pacifici, author of What is an Event? The innovative energy of this volume comes from combining three important yet often unduly disconnected fields of study on democratic transitions, protest politics and social movements, and the politics of collective memory. Conceptually bold, theoretically sophisticated, and empirically rich this trail-blazing work charts a new and exciting area of inquiry that has also tremendous practical import in today's world consumed by increasingly intense cultural-mnemonic wars in which civil societies refuse to stay silent. -Jan Kubik, Rutgers University and University College London