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Disinherited Trauma in Adelaida García Morales’ El Sur

    1. [1] Lancaster University

      Lancaster University

      Lancaster, Reino Unido

  • Localización: Bulletin of Spanish Studies, ISSN-e 1478-3428, ISSN 1475-3820, Vol. 97, Nº 6, 2020, págs. 983-1004
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • Adelaida García Morales’ El Sur (1985) was written two decades before the surge of public interest in collective memories of the Spanish Civil War and Franco’s dictatorship at the turn of the twenty-first century. The novella has attracted a good deal of critical attention in the years since its publication, but most scholars have focused on the incestuous family drama at the centre of the work and addressed its allusions to postwar Spain only as a secondary feature. This article revisits El Sur with the aim of illustrating how its author anticipates the concerns of the memory movement that emerged two decades after its composition. Of particular interest is García Morales’ prescient and nuanced representation of the intergenerational transmission of trauma. Thus, while the novella dramatizes the potential of the Civil War to cause psychological damage in the second generation, it illustrates the coping mechanisms that can mitigate the impact of parental trauma. El Sur resists the psychosocial determinism that the idea of communal trauma often entails and as a result makes a valuable contribution to the historical memory debates that came to prominence in the decades after its publication.


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