POV

Nostalgia for the Light: The Tools of Forensic Anthropology

Hear one woman's story of the search for her brother who was disappeared.

Nostalgia for the Light hints at the intersection of forensic anthropology with contemporary Latin American social movements. These movements aim to find the bodies of persons that had gone missing under various military regimes in the 1970s and 1980s. In the film, archaeologists are seen collaborating with local women to help recover personal and cultural history from Pinochet's dictatorship. These women lost loved ones under Pinochet's regime and now scour as "amateur archaeologists" in the Atacama Desert in hopes of finding answers in the form of human remains.

The use of forensic anthropology methods to aid in the investigation of human rights injustices began in the 1980s with Dr. Clyde Snow's excavations alongside a local crew (later named the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team) after Argentina's Dirty War. Snow said that he took the job in Argentina because, "The idea of using forensic anthropology for human rights violations was something new. This was the beginning." Snow felt that the identification of missing persons helped families in their grieving processes and moving on with their lives. Furthermore, it put an international spotlight on governments that have allowed for the miscarriages of justices and revealed the details of massacres that oppressive governments have actively suppressed.

Forensic anthropologists use a variety of processes to determine the fates of their victims:

In addition to using common tools and equipment such as shovels, trowels, knives and excavators to investigate sites, many teams will also use:

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