Gabriel Salazar

Salazar was born into a lower class family, he studied history, sociology and philosophy at Universidad de Chile, and for time he was assistant of historian Mario Góngora and classical historian Héctor Herrera Cajas. Salazar used to be a member of the Revolutionary Left Movement until 1973. During that year, he was tortured in Villa Grimaldi by the military. Once released from military prison camp in 1976, he went into exile in the United Kingdom. There he obtained a scholarship for continued studies at the University of Hull. He obtained a PhD in Economic and Social History from the university in 1984. The next year he returned to Chile. Relatively unknown, Salazar's breakthrough came in 1985.
His subject of study has included peons, labourers, proletarians, child huachos and women. Salazar is one of the founders of the historiographic current known as ''Nueva Historia Social''. Salazar considers history as a useful tool for social action. In past interviews, he has declared himself a "leftist, critical social historian" and rejected the label "Marxist". Provided by Wikipedia
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