Article published in:
Transnational discourses of peripheral sexualities in the Hispanic worldEdited by Michael J. Horswell and Nuria Godón
[Journal of Language and Sexuality 5:2] 2016
► pp. 182–196
The discourses of sexual dissidence and memoria histórica in Alicia Giménez Bartlett’s Donde nadie te encuentre
Elena Castro | Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, USA
Giménez Bartlett’s novel recovers the historical figure of La Pastora, who was represented by Franco’s discourse as a diabolic monster. La Pastora is an intersex person, and she also is a maquis (guerrilla). It is this double level of marginalization as intersex and maquis that is to be studied in this essay. Through the analysis of La Pastora’s character, memoria histórica and sexual identity will be uncovered as central to Giménez Bartlett’s novel since they reveal as well as denounce the lack of space for the “other” stories of the Civil War and Franco’s dictatorship. At the same time, Donde nadie te encuentre lays bare the issue of marginalization and repression in Franco’s Spain of non-normative gender and sexual identities — “dissident identities” as Raquel Osborne (2012) calls them — of any identity that does not conform to the models of sexuality imposed by Francoist discourse.
Keywords: dissident gender and sexualities, binary order, historical memory, intersex, technologies of control, heterocentrism, discourse, Franco's dictatorship, Spanish Civil War
Published online: 29 September 2016
https://doi.org/10.1075/jls.5.2.03cas
https://doi.org/10.1075/jls.5.2.03cas
References
References
Córdoba, David
Córdoba, David, Saéz, Javier & Vidarte, Paco
Martínez, Moisés
Osborne, Raquel
Platero, Raquel
Preciado, Beatriz