Dictatorship across Borders: Brazil, Chile, and the South American Cold War

This book offers a groundbreaking perspective on the 1973 Chilean coup, highlighting Brazil’s pivotal role in shaping the political landscape of South America during the Cold War. Shifting the focus from the United States to interregional dynamics, Mila Burns argues that Brazil was instrumental in the overthrow of Salvador Allende and the establishment of Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship.

Drawing on original documents, interviews, and newly accessible archives, particularly from the Brazilian Truth Commission, Burns reveals Brazil’s covert involvement in the coup, providing weapons, intelligence, and even torturers to anti-Allende forces. She also explores the resistance networks formed by Brazilian exiles in Chile. Burns’s impeccable research—combining history, anthropology, and political science—makes Dictatorship across Borders a vital addition to Cold War studies, reshaping how we understand power and resistance in South America.

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Dictatorship across Borders: Brazil, Chile, and the South American Cold War

This book offers a groundbreaking perspective on the 1973 Chilean coup, highlighting Brazil’s pivotal role in shaping the political landscape of South America during the Cold War. Shifting the focus from the United States to interregional dynamics, Mila Burns argues that Brazil was instrumental in the overthrow of Salvador Allende and the establishment of Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship.

Drawing on original documents, interviews, and newly accessible archives, particularly from the Brazilian Truth Commission, Burns reveals Brazil’s covert involvement in the coup, providing weapons, intelligence, and even torturers to anti-Allende forces. She also explores the resistance networks formed by Brazilian exiles in Chile. Burns’s impeccable research—combining history, anthropology, and political science—makes Dictatorship across Borders a vital addition to Cold War studies, reshaping how we understand power and resistance in South America.

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Dictatorship across Borders: Brazil, Chile, and the South American Cold War

Dictatorship across Borders: Brazil, Chile, and the South American Cold War

by Mila Burns
Dictatorship across Borders: Brazil, Chile, and the South American Cold War

Dictatorship across Borders: Brazil, Chile, and the South American Cold War

by Mila Burns

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Overview

This book offers a groundbreaking perspective on the 1973 Chilean coup, highlighting Brazil’s pivotal role in shaping the political landscape of South America during the Cold War. Shifting the focus from the United States to interregional dynamics, Mila Burns argues that Brazil was instrumental in the overthrow of Salvador Allende and the establishment of Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship.

Drawing on original documents, interviews, and newly accessible archives, particularly from the Brazilian Truth Commission, Burns reveals Brazil’s covert involvement in the coup, providing weapons, intelligence, and even torturers to anti-Allende forces. She also explores the resistance networks formed by Brazilian exiles in Chile. Burns’s impeccable research—combining history, anthropology, and political science—makes Dictatorship across Borders a vital addition to Cold War studies, reshaping how we understand power and resistance in South America.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781469688039
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Publication date: 07/10/2025
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 258
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Mila Burns is associate professor of Latin American and Latino Studies at Lehman College, and of History at The CUNY Graduate Center, where she is also the Associate Director at the Center for Latin American, Caribbean, and Latino Studies.

Mila Burns is associate professor of Latin American and Latino studies at Lehman College, and of history at The CUNY Graduate Center, where she is also the associate director at the Center for Latin American, Caribbean, and Latino Studies.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“A most impressive work of empirical scholarship, Dictatorship across Borders reveals Cold War Brazil as a kind of imperial viceroy for the United States. Drawing on new oral histories and freshly declassified Latin American archives, the book’s analytic breadth ranges from a Gramscian analysis of the agency of Brazil’s bourgeoisie to a Global South history framework to describe socialist Brazilian exiles forming counterhegemonic solidarities across borders.”—Thomas C. Field Jr., author of From Development to Dictatorship: Bolivia and the Alliance for Progress in the Kennedy Era

“An empathetic and humanist history of the challenges and dangers faced by Brazilians who sought refuge abroad as their country descended into authoritarianism, Brazilian involvement in Chile, and what happened to Brazilians in Chile upon the coup that toppled Allende.” — Patrick Barr-Melej, author of Psychedelic Chile: Youth, Counterculture, and Politics on the Road to Socialism and Dictatorship

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