Publication: Soñar bajo la luz de la luna: Un viaje de esperanza desde la mirada de mujeres creadoras en Honduras.
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Dobinger-Álvarez Quioto, Josefina
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Abstract
Este ensayo expone la actual crisis humanitaria que atraviesa Honduras,
particularmente una guerra no dicha dominada por la impunidad
que se expresa en el cuerpo de las mujeres. Los femicidios y la
fractura de lazos de solidaridad, creatividad y empatía social, reflejan,
como espejo, formas de terror ocultas dirigidas a dominar el cuerpo
social hondureño. Así, el escrito, indaga a través de narrativas estéticas
y paisajes afectivos/resilientes las maneras en que las mujeres se
oponen y afrontan las violencias. A su vez, el arte comunica a manera
de puente el trabajo de memoria que hace posible entrelazar y dar
voz a sus experiencias vitales y saberes creativos como el duelo y la
esperanza, invisibilizados y silenciados en los relatos históricos.
This essay exposes the current humanitarian crisis in Honduras, particularly an untold war dominated by impunity expressed in the body of women. The femicides and the fracture of bonds of solidarity, creativity and social empathy reflect, as a mirror, hidden forms of terror aimed at dominating the hondurian social body. Thus, the writing explores through aesthetic narratives and affective/resilient landscapes the ways in which women oppose and confront violence. In turn, art communicates as a bridge the work of memory that makes it possible to interlace and give voice to its vital experiences and creative knowledge such as mourning and hope, invisible and silenced in the historical accounts.
This essay exposes the current humanitarian crisis in Honduras, particularly an untold war dominated by impunity expressed in the body of women. The femicides and the fracture of bonds of solidarity, creativity and social empathy reflect, as a mirror, hidden forms of terror aimed at dominating the hondurian social body. Thus, the writing explores through aesthetic narratives and affective/resilient landscapes the ways in which women oppose and confront violence. In turn, art communicates as a bridge the work of memory that makes it possible to interlace and give voice to its vital experiences and creative knowledge such as mourning and hope, invisible and silenced in the historical accounts.




