A Social Autopsy of Mass Grave Exhumations in Spain
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3989/isegoria.2011.i45.741Keywords:
Spain, Civil War, Anthropology of the body, Anthropology of violence, Social memory, Mass graves, exhumations, Human rightsAbstract
This paper proposes a conceptualization of the mass graves of defeat, mostly derived from the Spanish Civil War (1936- 1939) and the early Postwar years, understanding them as a radical form of a below ground internal exile. Once the bodies in the mass graves and the violence inscribed in them have been characterized, the paper engages in a social autopsy of how this memory has evolved in contemporary Spain since the year 2000, when the first exhumation of the most recent cycle of Civil War graves took place. The analysis follows the political, judicial, scientific, media and associative impact of these exhumed bodies.
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