Abstract
In the late 1970s, poetry was used as a privileged strategy to disseminate the ideas of the social movement, serving as a form of didactic material or propaganda pro-amnesty slogan and as a form of denunciation, testimony, and remembrance. After the amnesty law, the amnestied militants wrote and published a set of books, forming specific literature. This work describes the main trends in poetry circumscribed to this condition of production.