{"title":"A Return to Monuments: Overcoming the “Forensic Turn” in Contemporary Spain","authors":"Daniel Palacios González","doi":"10.1344/waterfront2023.65.01.01","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In the year 2000 thirteen people were exhumed from a mass grave in Priaranza del Bierzo. This event has been established as the founding act of the movement called “Historical Memory” in the Kingdom of Spain. A movement which, despite claiming the recovery of the past within the framework of Human Rights rhetoric, has been marked by the exhumations of mass graves as its primary and most visible activity. These exhumations have always been portrayed positively by the media. This is framed within the so-called “forensic turn,” as a process in which scientists have been incorporated into the investigation of mass violence.However, this account has not addressed a number of issues, one of which is fundamental and relates to the fate of the bodies after exhumation. Another omission is the question of what to do when the graves are not found where they were believed to be. In this sense, the subject has been approached from an interdisciplinary perspective, starting from the history of art, making use of ethnographic techniques and taking samples from a qualitative-quantitative study which has been carried out over the last 4 years throughout the country. Therefore, the materials used to address the problem are organized into the following three parts. Firstly, the limitations of the forensic model and exhumations are discussed in detail. Secondly, monuments built after the exhumation of mass graves are examined. Thirdly, monuments constructed when the grave remained undiscovered, and the bodies could not be exhumed are also considered.In this regard, the experiences analysed have firstly clarified the limitations and dissatisfactions that have arisen around the “forensic turn.” The low rate of identifications, the lack of symbolic mediators and the lack of social recognition, lead to the fact that exhumations in themselves do not offer answers and that, on the contrary, they do not necessarily modify the meaning of the graves as tools of terror. Therefore, in the second section, some initiatives have been employed to illustrate the need to bury the bodies after exhumations, both for pragmatic and symbolic reasons. These monuments could also be the solution for those unable to locate the mass graves, as explained in the third section. The conclusion focuses on the origins of these “memorial monument solutions,” which have transcended the “forensic” model. Therefore, it is suggested that it would be relevant to continue researching these practices in the future, and not to see them as mere solutions to a technical problem, but as a new stage of memorial practices.","PeriodicalId":41149,"journal":{"name":"On the Waterfront","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"On the Waterfront","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1344/waterfront2023.65.01.01","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"ARCHITECTURE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In the year 2000 thirteen people were exhumed from a mass grave in Priaranza del Bierzo. This event has been established as the founding act of the movement called “Historical Memory” in the Kingdom of Spain. A movement which, despite claiming the recovery of the past within the framework of Human Rights rhetoric, has been marked by the exhumations of mass graves as its primary and most visible activity. These exhumations have always been portrayed positively by the media. This is framed within the so-called “forensic turn,” as a process in which scientists have been incorporated into the investigation of mass violence.However, this account has not addressed a number of issues, one of which is fundamental and relates to the fate of the bodies after exhumation. Another omission is the question of what to do when the graves are not found where they were believed to be. In this sense, the subject has been approached from an interdisciplinary perspective, starting from the history of art, making use of ethnographic techniques and taking samples from a qualitative-quantitative study which has been carried out over the last 4 years throughout the country. Therefore, the materials used to address the problem are organized into the following three parts. Firstly, the limitations of the forensic model and exhumations are discussed in detail. Secondly, monuments built after the exhumation of mass graves are examined. Thirdly, monuments constructed when the grave remained undiscovered, and the bodies could not be exhumed are also considered.In this regard, the experiences analysed have firstly clarified the limitations and dissatisfactions that have arisen around the “forensic turn.” The low rate of identifications, the lack of symbolic mediators and the lack of social recognition, lead to the fact that exhumations in themselves do not offer answers and that, on the contrary, they do not necessarily modify the meaning of the graves as tools of terror. Therefore, in the second section, some initiatives have been employed to illustrate the need to bury the bodies after exhumations, both for pragmatic and symbolic reasons. These monuments could also be the solution for those unable to locate the mass graves, as explained in the third section. The conclusion focuses on the origins of these “memorial monument solutions,” which have transcended the “forensic” model. Therefore, it is suggested that it would be relevant to continue researching these practices in the future, and not to see them as mere solutions to a technical problem, but as a new stage of memorial practices.
2000年,在Priaranza del Bierzo的一个万人坑中挖出了13具尸体。这一事件被确立为西班牙王国“历史记忆”运动的创始行为。这一运动尽管声称在人权言论的框架内恢复过去,但其主要和最明显的活动却是挖掘乱葬坑。媒体总是积极地描述这些挖掘工作。这是在所谓的“法医转向”框架内,作为一个将科学家纳入大规模暴力调查的过程。然而,这一叙述没有处理若干问题,其中一个是基本问题,涉及尸体在挖掘后的命运。另一个遗漏的问题是,如果坟墓没有在他们认为的地方被发现,该怎么办。从这个意义上说,这个主题是从跨学科的角度来研究的,从艺术史开始,利用民族志技术,并从过去4年在全国范围内进行的定性-定量研究中取样。因此,用于解决这个问题的材料被组织成以下三个部分。首先,详细讨论了法医模型和挖掘的局限性。其次,检查挖掘万人坑后建造的纪念碑。第三,也可以考虑在坟墓未被发现,尸体无法挖掘的情况下建造纪念碑。在这方面,分析的经验首先澄清了围绕“法医转向”产生的限制和不满。辨认率低、缺乏象征性的媒介和缺乏社会承认,导致这样一个事实,即挖掘本身并不能提供答案,相反,它们并不一定改变坟墓作为恐怖工具的意义。因此,在第二节中,出于务实和象征的原因,采用了一些倡议来说明在挖掘后埋葬尸体的必要性。正如第三部分所解释的那样,这些纪念碑也可能是那些无法找到万人坑的人的解决方案。结语部分着重探讨了这些超越“法医”模式的“纪念性纪念碑解决方案”的起源。因此,建议在未来继续研究这些实践是相关的,而不是将它们仅仅视为技术问题的解决方案,而是将其视为纪念实践的新阶段。