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4 - CATAPULTING MEN TO ACTION: THE MARCH OF THE EMPTY POTS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2010

Lisa Baldez
Affiliation:
Washington University, St Louis
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Summary

Nearly every one of the scores of books written about the Popular Unity (UP) period mentions the March of the Empty Pots, but few devote more than one or two sentences to it. Yet this event played a pivotal role in shaping the future course of the Allende government. The March of the Empty Pots demonstrated a significant lack of middle-class support for Allende's peaceful revolution and sent a signal of domestic discontent to observers around the world. Women organized the protest at a moment when the opposition parties were poised to take definitive action against the government, in the face of a growing climate of crisis and instability. They timed the march to coincide with the end of Fidel Castro's three-and-a-half week visit to Chile. The march set off a series of events that changed the fate of both the opposition and the government in significant ways. The outbreak of violence during the protest prompted President Allende to declare a state of emergency in Santiago and united the opposition parties in an effort to impeach one of Allende's top cabinet ministers. Male party leaders framed their cooperation as a response to women's actions throughout the remainder of the Allende era. They would continue to invoke women's participation as a way to sustain unity within this new coalition. The impact of the March of the Empty Pots stemmed from the fact that it occurred at a moment when these parties were primed to ally with one another.

Type
Chapter
Information
Why Women Protest
Women's Movements in Chile
, pp. 76 - 97
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2002

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