ETXEBERRIA, F.; SERRULLA, F. and HERRASTI, L. (2014) Simas, cavernas y pozos para ocultar cadáveres en la Guerra Civil española (1936-1939). Aportaciones desde la antropología forense

DATE
TITLE AUTHORS TYPE
2014
Simas, cavernas y pozos para ocultar cadáveres en la Guerra Civil española (1936-1939). Aportaciones desde la antropología forense Francisco ETXEBERRIA
Francisco SERRULLA
Lourdes HERRASTI
Article

DUEÑAS, O. and SOLÉ, Q. (2014) El juez Josep Maria Bertran de Quintana (1884-1960): compromiso político y cementerios clandestinos

DATE
TITLE AUTHORS TYPE
2014
El juez Josep Maria Bertran de Quintana (1884-1960): compromiso político y cementerios clandestinos Oriol DUEÑAS
Queralt SOLÉ
Article

DOUGLAS, L. (2014) Mass graves gone missing: producing knowledge in a world of absence

DATE
TITLE AUTHOR TYPE
2014
Mass graves gone missing: producing knowledge in a world of absence Lee DOUGLAS Article

WAGNER, S. and DAYNES, S. (2014) Usages contemporains de Marcel Mauss dans les sciences sociales aux Etats-Unis (A propos du don et du commerce de sang, d’organes, et de cellules)

DATE
TITLE AUTHORS TYPE
2014
Usages contemporains de Marcel Mauss dans les sciences sociales aux Etats-Unis (A propos du don et du commerce de sang, d’organes, et de cellules) Sarah WAGNER
Sarah DAYNES
Chapter

DEL RÍO, Á. and TALEGO, F. (2014) Impugnando la impunidad. Las víctimas del franquismo frente al Estado

DATE
TITLE AUTHORS TYPE

2014

Impugnando la impunidad. Las víctimas del franquismo frente al Estado Ángel DEL RÍO
Félix TALEGO
Article

DEL RÍO, Á. (2014) Víctimas del franquismo y políticas de la memoria en Andalucía

DATE
TITLE AUTHOR TYPE

2014

Víctimas del franquismo y políticas de la memoria en Andalucía Ángel DEL RÍO Artículo

CONGRAM, D.; PASSALACQUA, N. and RÍOS, L. (2014) Intersite analysis of victims of extra- and judicial execution in civil war Spain: Location and direction of perimortem gunshot trauma

DATE TITLE AUTHORS TYPE

2014

Intersite analysis of victims of extra- and judicial execution in civil war Spain: Location and direction of perimortem gunshot trauma Derek CONGRAM
Nicholas PASSALACQUA
Luis RÍOS
Article

Ferrándiz F. & Robben, A. -editors- (2015): Necropolitics: Mass Graves and Exhumations in the Age of Human Rights

Publication date
Title Author(s) Type
June 2015, in press
Necropolitics: Mass Graves and Exhumations in the Age of Human Rights Francisco Ferrándiz & Antonius Robben – editors -. Zoë Crossland, Francisco Ferrándiz, Luis Fondebrider, Iosif Kovras, Heonik Kwon, Isaias Rojas-Perez, Antonius C. G. M. Robben, Elena Lesley Rozen, Katerina Stefatos, Francesc Torres, Sara Wagner, Richard Ashby Wilson. Book

Abstract: “This excellent and timely volume . . . opens up new avenues of global comparison and investigation. As if understanding the past was not daunting in itself, the chapters in this collection provide fascinating accounts of the political and legal struggles surrounding exhumations, and these often include popular mobilizations that are both intensely local and globally connected. I know of no other volume that addresses the topic of exhumations as profoundly, and in as many disparate cases in Latin America, Africa, Europe, and Asia.”—From the Foreword by Richard Ashby Wilson.
The unmarked mass graves left by war and acts of terror are lasting traces of violence in communities traumatized by fear, conflict, and unfinished mourning. Like silent testimonies to the wounds of history, these graves continue to inflict harm on communities and families who wish to bury or memorialize their lost kin. Changing political circumstances can reveal the location of mass graves or facilitate their exhumation, but the challenge of identifying and recovering the dead is only the beginning of a complex process that brings the rights and wishes of a bereaved society onto a transnational stage.
Necropolitics: Mass Graves and Exhumations in the Age of Human Rights examines the political and social implications of this sensitive undertaking in specific local and national contexts. International forensic methods, local-level claims, national political developments, and transnational human rights discourse converge in detailed case studies from the United States, Argentina, Chile, Peru, Spain, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Greece, Rwanda, Cambodia, and Korea. Contributors analyze the role of exhumations in transitional justice from the steps of interviewing eyewitnesses and survivors to the painstaking forensic recovery and comparison of DNA profiles. This innovative volume demonstrates that contemporary exhumations are as much a source of personal, historical, and criminal evidence as instruments of redress for victims through legal accountability and memory politics.
Editorial: University of Pennsylvania Press.

Faces and Traces of Violence: Memory Politics in Global Perspective

Publication date
Title Editors Type
Dicember 2014
Faces and Traces of Violence: Memory Politics in Global Perspective Francisco Ferrándiz, Marije Hristova, Lee Douglas, Zoé de Kerangat Dossier

Faces and Traces of ViolenceAbstract: “This dossier displays a selection of the work presented during the last six years in the permanent international seminar Faces and Traces of Violence/Rastros y rostros de la violencia held monthly at ILLA-CCHS-CSIC. […] Since its beginning, the seminar has been a space for public and academic debate, and its main objective has been the development of critical, comparative and interdisciplinary analyses of different manifestations of violence (especially political and war-related violence) both historically and in the present moment, as well as the development of careful reflections regarding the intricate memory politics that have emerged as a result the contingent reactivation of these violent acts, both in the past and the present. […] The seminar sessions have witnessed lively debates on topics including the following: militaristic representations of the world; memory and mourning in Argentina and Chile; the role of forensic science in the investigation of political violence; the connections between memory, philosophy and theater; the cinematographic recycling of political violence; the forms and meaning of poetry in post-war contexts; the “transnationalization” of forced disappearances and other victimhood models; the use of media in peace-building; the gray areas of the Gypsy Holocaust; the effects of transitional justice policies in post-war Bosnia; the structural violence affecting border crossings in Northern Mexico; how material objects elicit memory in traumatic contexts; the evolution of contemporary memory politics in Spain and Latin America; transnational memory practices and identity politics in contemporary El Salvador; the social and political effects of confessions of perpetrators in the framework of truth commissions; the development of a memory “market” in Latin America; the relationship between human rights and copy rights; the painful re-elaboration of Nazism and the horrors of the Second World War in Austria and Germany; the role of the new media in the creation of new modalities of witnessing and victimhood; the contemporary management of the corpses of mass violence; the role of ruins in the making of national memories; the bureaucratic aftermath of massacres in Colombia; and the memorial processes linked to exiles, diasporas and genocides. Or, as displayed in this dossier’s selection of articles, the seminar has also touched upon other equally diverse topics such as the configuration of cosmopolitan memories on a global scale after the Holocaust; the critical analysis of the tropes and narratives used both in historiography and public debates to define Europe’s violent twentieth century; the shocking aftermath of the experience of the Soviet Gulag for some Bolshevik loyalists; the emergence of global memoryscapes in France; the politics behind the non-remembrance of the Holocaust in Hungary; the attempts to deal with the legacy of the dictatorship in Portugal; the impact of mass grave exhumations from the Spanish Civil War in the reactivation of conflicting memories of the conflict; the difficulties in accessing and making sense of the archives of violence in the aftermath of Spanish dictatorship; the tensions between memorial places and national heritage in post-Pinochet Chile; and the enormous power of forced disappearances to disrupt the social fabric in contemporary Mexico. […]”

Francisco Ferrándiz (ILLA-CCHS, CSIC)

Culture & History Digital Journal