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Título
“What Fits in One Hand”: On the Entanglement with Things of Republican Women Writers and Artists in Exile
Otros títulos
Iberian Materialities
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Republican women exiles
Things
Entanglements
Artistic culture
Self-writing
Clasificación UNESCO
6203 Teoría, Análisis y Critica de las Bellas Artes
6202 Teoría, Análisis y Crítica Literarias
5204.03 Migraciones
5501 Biografías
Fecha de publicación
2023-09
Editor
Duke University Press
Citación
Rosón, M., Pol, A. (2023) “What Fits in One Hand”: On the Entanglement with Things of Republican Women Writers and Artists in Exile. Romanic Review, 114 (2): 341–359. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/00358118-10604236
Resumen
[EN]This article examines the relationships that developed in exile between women writers and artists and things following the Spanish Civil War. Our analysis is based on self-writing and visual art. Using a New Materialist theoretical framework, the article shows how, for these women in exile, things had agency, producing entanglements, ruptures (desgarros), or moorings necessary for a new orientation. Disorientation, arising from the new social and geographical context of exile, also affects the uses and function of things. This produces a subjectivity saturated by material phenomena, the relationship with which is heightened by the experience of fleeing one’s country. The writers and artists discussed include Victorina Durán, Mada Carreño, María Luisa Elío, Silvia Mistral, María Teresa de León, Concha Méndez, and Maruja Mallo. All of them went into exile in Spanish-speaking countries in Latin America, specifically Mexico, Argentina, and Chile.
URI
ISSN
0035-8118
DOI
10.1215/00358118-10604236
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