ABSTRACT

This volume explores how Colombian novelists, artists, performers, activists, musicians, and others seek to enact—to perform, to stage, to represent—human rights situations that are otherwise enacted discursively, that is, made public or official, in juridical and political realms in which justice often remains an illusory or promised future.

In order to probe how cultural production embodies the tensions between the abstract universality of human rights and the materiality of violations on individual human bodies and on determined groups, the volume asks the following questions:

  • How does the transmission of historical traumas of Colombia’s past, through human rights narratives in various forms, inform the debates around the subjects of rights, truth and memory, remembrance and forgetting, and the construction of citizenship through solidarity and collective struggles for justice?
  • What are the different roles taken by cultural products in the interstices among rights, laws, and social justice within different contexts of state violence and states of exception?
  • What are alternative perspectives, sources, and (micro)histories from Colombia of the creation, evolution, and practice of human rights?
  • How does the human rights discourse interface with notions of environmental justice, especially in the face of global climate change, regional (neo)extractivism, the implementation of megaprojects, and ongoing post-accord thefts and (re)appropriations of land?

Through a wide range of disciplinary lenses, the different chapters explore counter-hegemonic concepts of human rights, decolonial options struggling against oppression and market logic, and alternative discourses of human dignity and emancipation within the pluriverse.

part I|75 pages

Human rights narratives, micronarratives, and subjectivation

chapter 1|16 pages

Savage states

Literature and human rights in nineteenth-century Colombia

chapter 2|25 pages

The deaths inscribed in us

Art, memory, and public space in Doris Salcedo

chapter 3|18 pages

Towards emancipatory human rights narratives

Reflections on dissent, the state of siege, and embodiment in Daniel Ferreira's Rebelión de los oficios inútiles

chapter 4|14 pages

Toe, cabinet, and float

Literary subjectivations of victimhood facing the human rights discourse

part II|78 pages

Land, environment, commodity

chapter 5|16 pages

The voids of memory

The reemergence of the Rubber Boom genocide in Embrace of the Serpent, by Ciro Guerra

chapter 6|21 pages

Culture and resistance in Montes de María, Colombia

Ceferina Banquez's songs and memories of war 1

chapter 7|23 pages

Colombian graphic narratives of the post-acuerdo

Dialogic views of water and land as human rights

chapter 8|16 pages

Medicinal plants

Healing the relationships between human and non-human in post-accord times

part III|45 pages

Structural, political, and gender-based violence and resistance

chapter 9|15 pages

Wounds and monsters

Representations of gender-based violence and feminicide in the aftermath of the Colombian armed conflict

chapter 10|15 pages

Rocking the Colombian casbah

Exposing lives of Colombian violence through music

chapter 11|13 pages

Public secrets, private violence

A reading of Laura Restrepo's Delirio

part IV|54 pages

Transitional justice, grassroots activism, and problematizing victimhood

chapter 12|18 pages

Beyond the liberal-institutional paradigm

Grassroots human rights and transitional justice narratives in Antígonas, tribunal de mujeres

chapter 13|20 pages

Visualizing human rights

The sanctuary of victims in the House of Memory of Tumaco

chapter 14|14 pages

Peace as a trap

Dangerousness, due process, and reintegration in Mi capitán Fabián Sicachá by Flor Romero de Nohra