Book contents
- Roberto Bolaño in Context
- Roberto Bolaño in Context
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Chronology
- Part I Geographical, Social, and Historical Contexts
- Part II Shaping Events and Literary History
- Part III Genres, Discourses, Media
- Part IV Aesthetics, Culture, and Politics
- Chapter 23 The Abomination of Literature
- Chapter 24 Religion and Politics
- Chapter 25 Gender and Sexuality
- Chapter 26 Race and Ethnicity
- Chapter 27 Trauma and Collective Memory
- Chapter 28 Fictions of the Avant-Gardes
- Chapter 29 Love and Friendship
- Chapter 30 World Literature: Twenty-First-Century Legacies
- Further Reading
- Index
Chapter 25 - Gender and Sexuality
from Part IV - Aesthetics, Culture, and Politics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 December 2022
- Roberto Bolaño in Context
- Roberto Bolaño in Context
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Chronology
- Part I Geographical, Social, and Historical Contexts
- Part II Shaping Events and Literary History
- Part III Genres, Discourses, Media
- Part IV Aesthetics, Culture, and Politics
- Chapter 23 The Abomination of Literature
- Chapter 24 Religion and Politics
- Chapter 25 Gender and Sexuality
- Chapter 26 Race and Ethnicity
- Chapter 27 Trauma and Collective Memory
- Chapter 28 Fictions of the Avant-Gardes
- Chapter 29 Love and Friendship
- Chapter 30 World Literature: Twenty-First-Century Legacies
- Further Reading
- Index
Summary
Both dictatorships and democracies are conceived in Bolaño’s texts within the framework of a patriarchal order in which sexual impulses and pleasure in the mutilation of women and children are not only the legacy of the authoritarian abuses of dictatorships but also the very condition of the formation of the legal apparatuses of democratic states. Many of the approaches to gender in Bolaño have focused on the killing of women in Ciudad Juarez. What I contend in these pages is that the normalization of violence against women or more subtle ways of erasing women’s visions (in particular in relation to strong or independent women) is what most calls for a feminist reflection in Bolaño’s world, because what is exposed is precisely the simultaneity of autonomy and vulnerability. Gender violence in Bolaño also involves the inexorable link between masculinity and rape/feminicide. And it is precisely within this link that literature plays such a central role, not only in the exposure of violence, but also in a more silent (and hidden) consent to sexual violence and the killing of women.
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- Information
- Roberto Bolaño In Context , pp. 285 - 293Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023