Unrecovered objects: Narratives of dispossession, slow violence and survival in the investigation of mass graves from the Spanish Civil War

被引:5
|
作者
Renshaw, Layla [1 ]
机构
[1] Kingston Univ, Forens Sci, Forens Archaeol & Anthropol, Kingston, England
关键词
mass graves; memory; slow violence; Spanish Civil War; survivance; theft; women; POLITICS; RETURN;
D O I
10.1177/1359183520954499
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
The Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) was triggered by a military uprising against the democratically elected Popular Front government. Away from the battlefield, this war was characterized by the politically-motivated murder of thousands of civilians, many of whom were buried in clandestine graves throughout Spain. Following Franco's victory and subsequent dictatorship, there were strong prohibitions on commemorating the Republican dead. A radical rupture in Spain's memory politics occurred from 2000 onwards with the founding of the Association for the Recovery of Historical Memory and other similar pressure groups that have organized the exhumation and reburial of the Republican dead. This article is based on fieldwork conducted in communities in Castile and Leon, and Extremadura as they underwent mass grave investigations. It examines the experience of theft and dispossession that occurred as part of the Francoist repression of Republicans. Accounts of these episodes focus on stolen and looted objects robbed from the dead during the killings, from the graves' post-mortem, or from surviving relatives as part of the systematic dispossession of Republican households that occurred during the war and immediate post-war period. These narratives surface with frequency during the investigation and exhumation of mass graves. Despite the fact that many are lost forever, these stolen possessions can function as powerful mnemonic objects with a strong affective and imaginative hold. The narratives of dispossession explore themes of survival, the experiences of women and children, and the impact of slow violence. By invoking theft and stolen objects, these stories highlight forms of trauma and forms of memory that may not be represented fully by the dominant investigative paradigm of the mass grave exhumation with its inherent focus on death, cataclysmic violence and the tangible, physical traces of the past.
引用
收藏
页码:428 / 446
页数:19
相关论文
共 12 条
  • [1] Talking war and violence: women and narratives during the Spanish Civil War
    Joly, Maud
    MELANGES DE LA CASA DE VELAZQUEZ, 2007, 37 (02): : 199 - +
  • [2] Identification process in mass graves from the Spanish Civil War I
    Rios, Luis
    Casado Ovejero, Jose Ignacio
    Puente Prieto, Jorge
    FORENSIC SCIENCE INTERNATIONAL, 2010, 199 (1-3) : E27 - E36
  • [3] Identification process in mass graves from the Spanish Civil War II
    Rios, Luis
    Garcia-Rubio, Almudena
    Martinez, Berta
    Alonso, Andrea
    Puente, Jorge
    FORENSIC SCIENCE INTERNATIONAL, 2012, 219 (1-3) : E4 - E9
  • [4] Contemporary art and archaeology of disaster in the mass graves of the Spanish Civil War
    Lapena-Gallego, Gloria
    ARTE INDIVIDUO Y SOCIEDAD, 2020, 32 (04) : 885 - 902
  • [5] Digging up the recent Spanish memory: genetic identification of human remains from mass graves of the Spanish Civil War and posterior dictatorship
    Baeta, Miriam
    Nunez, Carolina
    Cardoso, Sergio
    Palencia-Madrid, Leire
    Herrasti, Lourdes
    Etxeberria, Francisco
    de Pancorbo, Marian M.
    FORENSIC SCIENCE INTERNATIONAL-GENETICS, 2015, 19 : 272 - 279
  • [6] An assessment of a massively parallel sequencing approach for the identification of individuals from mass graves of the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939)
    Calafell, Francesc
    Anglada, Roger
    Bonet, Nuria
    Gonzalez-Ruiz, Mercedes
    Prats-Munoz, Gemma
    Rasal, Raquel
    Lalueza-Fox, Carles
    Bertranpetit, Jaume
    Malgosa, Assumpcio
    Casals, Ferran
    ELECTROPHORESIS, 2016, 37 (21) : 2841 - 2847
  • [7] Identification success rates in the post-Spanish Civil War mass graves located in the cemetery of Paterna, Spain: Meta-research on 15 mass graves with 933 subjects
    Sanchis-Gimeno, Juan A.
    Iglesias-Bexiga, Javier
    Schwab, Marisol E.
    Lopez-Garcia, Gema
    Ariza, Eloy
    Calpe, Alejando
    Mezquida, Miguel
    Nalla, Shahed
    Ercan, Ilker
    FORENSIC SCIENCE INTERNATIONAL, 2024, 361
  • [8] SURVIVAL OF THE COMMON GRAVES OF THE SPANISH CIVIL WAR IN THE 21ST CENTURY. CULTURAL EVIDENCE, ACADEMIC PARTICULARITY
    Sole, Queralt
    HISTORIA CONTEMPORANEA, 2019, (60) : 439 - 475
  • [9] Discovery of a mass grave from the Spanish Civil War using Ground Penetrating Radar and forensic archaeology
    Fernandez-Alvarez, Jose-Paulino
    Rubio-Melendi, David
    Martinez-Velasco, Antxoka
    Pringle, Jamie K.
    Aguilera, Hector-David
    FORENSIC SCIENCE INTERNATIONAL, 2016, 267 : E10 - E17
  • [10] Digging Franco's Trenches: An Archaeological Investigation of a Nationalist Position from the Spanish Civil War
    Gonzalez-Ruibal, Alfredo
    JOURNAL OF CONFLICT ARCHAEOLOGY, 2011, 6 (02) : 97 - 123