Gabriel

Gabriel Salazar Vergara, a Chilean historian, was born on 31 January 1936. The country is famous for his sociology studies and his theories of movement. Particularly, he was prominent during the protests by students of the years 2011-12 and the 2006. Salazar was born into an income-constrained family. He was a student of sociology, philosophy, and history in the prestigious Universidad de Chile. He worked as an assistant to Mario Gongora, a classical historian, as well as Hector Herrera Cajas, a historian. Salazar was an active Revolutionary Left Movement member from 1973 until 1973. The group also brutalized him by the military at Villa Grimaldi that same year. In 1976, he was released from a prison camp for military and was exiled to the United Kingdom. He was granted a scholarship to pursue his studies in Hull University. University of Hull. In 1984, he was awarded an honorary PhD from the University of Hull with a focus on Economic and Social History. Then he returned to Chile in the year following. Salazar achieved a breakthrough in 1985. His work is largely unnoticed. Salazar's research subjects included laborers, peons, and children Huachos[A] and women. Salazar was among the founders of Nueva Historia Social, a historical movement. Salazar believes that history is an effective instrument for the social sphere. Salazar claimed that he was an ally of the left and a critical social historian during an interview. Salazar resisted the "Marxist term." Gabriel Gabriel Gabriel Gabriel

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