Mourning the Image, The Afterlife of Bodies in Contemporary Spain
Loading...
No Access Until
Permanent Link(s)
Collections
Other Titles
Authors
Abstract
This dissertation examines categories of human remains germane to Spain’s mass grave exhumation phenomenon across three different media: photography, monuments and the plastic arts. In looking at spirit, memorial, and pictorialist genres of photography, each chapter explores the distinct relationship between the living and the dead as evidenced through physical spaces of interaction as well as visual sites of engagement. Beginning with the nation’s foremost specter, the first chapter examines portraits, correspondence, lectures, and the art installation, Everstill / Siempretodavía, which celebrates the lost poet-dramaturge, Federico García Lorca, at the family’s summer home in Huerta de San Vicente, Granada. These artifacts and exhibitions demonstrate a mutual desire that forecasts not only Lorca’s anticipation of his own demise and return, but also the public’s longing to grieve him somewhere on the landscape. Despite his lack of locatable material presence and inability to be mourned, Lorca’s spirit is enlivened and perpetuated through his cultural legacy within the spaces he inhabited while living. Moving from the missing singular body to the emergence of collective remains, the second chapter investigates contemporary excavations of Republican mass graves experiencing an active resignification in reburial. By mitigating their loss through documentary photography, I situate the practice of post-mortem portraiture within Clemente Bernad’s Desvelados as a funerary custom of recovery. In these visualizations of skeletal matter, the viewer mourns the dead by witnessing the history of violence inscribed on their remains and repatriates disappeared loved ones back into the community. From these previously concealed bodies in the midst of memorialization, the third chapter analyzes the single most visible site of death in Spanish memory politics, el Valle de los Caídos, the Fascist-Catholic monument-basilica-war memorial commissioned in 1940 to honor Francisco Franco’s fallen soldiers. Unlike the Civil War victims interred within the crypt of the Catalan spiritual community of Montserrat, a historic site of Republican violence against the Church and regional reconciliation, the assembled components of el Valle deter the prospect of national reconciliation. Foreclosing familial mourning of the dead, this composite site gestures to the authorial mark of the dictator enshrined within the floor of the basilica.
Journal / Series
Volume & Issue
Description
Sponsorship
Date Issued
2017-08-30
Publisher
Keywords
El Valle de los Caídos; Federico García Lorca; photography; Spanish Cultural Studies; European studies; Mass Graves
Location
Effective Date
Expiration Date
Sector
Employer
Union
Union Local
NAICS
Number of Workers
Committee Chair
Keller, Patricia M.
Committee Co-Chair
Committee Member
Howie, Cary S.
Campbell, Timothy C.
Campbell, Timothy C.
Degree Discipline
Romance Studies
Degree Name
Ph. D., Romance Studies
Degree Level
Doctor of Philosophy
Related Version
Related DOI
Related To
Related Part
Based on Related Item
Has Other Format(s)
Part of Related Item
Related To
Related Publication(s)
Link(s) to Related Publication(s)
References
Link(s) to Reference(s)
Previously Published As
Government Document
ISBN
ISMN
ISSN
Other Identifiers
Rights
Rights URI
Types
dissertation or thesis