Resumen:
This work is based on a series of in-depth interviews conducted with present and former participants of the movement of political protest formed by the “popular” or “neighborhood” assemblies founded in Buenos Aires around the end of 2001 and the beginning of 2002. Discourses produced in exceptional times tend to be profoundly revealing of ordinary, widely shared notions. Thus, the aim of this work consists in analyzing the discourse about political representation and deliberation that constituted the axis of the aforementioned experience, which took place in the midst of a deep crisis of representation. More specifically, it seeks to analyze the discourse of assembly members about the assemblies and their practices; about representation, delegation, participation, political parties, representative democracy and direct democracy in order to apprehend their underlying conceptions of representation, its paradoxes, its potential and its limits.