ECOMEMORIA'S DIASPORIC SPACE OF COMMEMORATION: A TREE-PLANTING CEREMONY AND ITS LIVING MEMORIAL

RAMIREZ, CAROLINA; Serpente, Alejandra

Abstract

Ecomemoria comprises an intergenerational group of Chilean exiles living in the UK and in Chile who aim to keep alive the memory of and claim justice for those who were disappeared (desaparecidos) and killed (ejecutados politicos) during Pinochet's dictatorship (1973-1990). This piece draws on the authors' recent participation in a specific tree-planting ceremony performed by this group in Wales. By looking at the relocation of bodies, and the enactments and artefacts within the site-specificity of this event, a reflection on both the diasporic space developed and the unexpectedly complex character of the "living memorial" the group aims to cultivate will be elaborated. Ecomemoria's members match their living memory project with the trees that commemorate the life of the disappeared. Yet this conception here is complicated by highlighting the transnational, as well as the active, social, embodied and uncanny character of the ceremony which, as well be argued comprises a living memorial in its own right. This essay starts by briefly presenting Ecomemoria, to then describe and deconstruct the ceremony's diasporic and haunting qualities. Finally, to conclude, a much more complex idea of a living memorial will be developed in consideration of the mobile, affective, embodied and ghostly mise-en-scene the ceremony produces.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000306744200003 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: JOURNAL OF LATIN AMERICAN CULTURAL STUDIES
Volumen: 21
Número: 2
Editorial: ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
Fecha de publicación: 2012
Página de inicio: 189
Página final: 202
DOI:

10.1080/13569325.2012.694808

Notas: ISI