Remembering from January or May. Memory and forgetfulness in Him Salvador from the study aesthetic of two monuments postwar

Authors

  • Eduardo Maciel Universidad Centroamericana José Simeón Cañas

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5377/realidad.v0i156.12012

Keywords:

Memory, Aesthetics, Monument to the Reconciliation, Monument to the Memory and the Truth, Battle over memory, Heuristic proposal, Benjamin, Walter, 1892-1940

Abstract

In El Salvador, the battle over memory is fought on multiple plains, one of them the creation of places of memory in the public space. Drawing on the perspective of aesthetic studies (especially Walter Benjamin) this article explores the battle over memory as represented in two monuments that emerged from the Salvadoran postwar period: The Monument of Reconciliation and the Monument of Memory and Truth. These  monuments materialize two heuristic proposals about war that arise from opposing positions of  power. To illustrate this contrast in power, I use two temporal allegories: January represents the heuristic  supported by the post-war political elites (centered on the discourse of reconciliation and whose symbol is  the Peace Accords); whereas May represents the heuristic thrusted by the civilian victims (a temporal allegory based on two scorched-earth operations in May 1980 and 1982, as well as on the resistance actions against the Reconciliation Law in May 2019).

Realidad: Revista de Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades No. 156, 2020: 5-33.

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Published

2020-12-31


How to Cite

Maciel, E. (2020). Remembering from January or May. Memory and forgetfulness in Him Salvador from the study aesthetic of two monuments postwar. Realidad, Revista De Ciencias Sociales Y Humanidades, (156), 5–33. https://doi.org/10.5377/realidad.v0i156.12012

Issue

Section

Essays