Remembering Violence in <i>Matar a Jesús</i> (2017)

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31261/rias.14719

Keywords:

violence, Latin America, Colombian cinema, Matar a Jesús, Laura Mora

Abstract

Events that are violent and traumatic in nature entail the breakdown of language and, with it, the conceptual frameworks that construct our social worlds. The inability of reason to articulate this rupture and to conventionally construct meaning implies that the reality of misery and violence can only be suggested (or formulated) through acts of narration that formally and affectively articulate memory into an imaginary. This dislocation of the event from its representation can then only be mapped through the generation and stimulation of affect – which has come to substitute reason as tool for remembering, narrating and, consequently, of mediating our reality. In the present article, the author studies the role of elements that evoke memory and generate the affective dynamics of a traumatic event. Specifically, the author explores the interactions of memory and affect in the process of narrating violence by analyzing objects of memory (such as photographs) that Paula, the protagonist of Matar a Jesús (Killing Jesus (2017) by Laura Mora), utilizes in order to articulate the story of her father’s murder. Further, she claims that the incorporation of filmmaker Laura Mora’s own personal experience as victim of violence points to the fact that the incessant necessity of reformulating trauma and stylizing misery widens the gap between reality and its representation, thus rendering violence unimaginable.

Author Biography

Laura Fattori, Independent Scholar

Laura Fattori holds an MA in Film and Moving Image Studies from Concordia University, in Montreal, Canada. Her current research interest deals with the role cinema plays in the Colombian ‘post-conflict’ society. Her essay “Narratives of Post-Conflict: Memory and the Representation of Violence in Colombian Contemporary National Cinema”, earned her a Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema Award 2020-21, as well as a Concordia Graduate Mobility Award 2020-21, which allowed her to broaden her research. Her undergraduate dissertation, “Narratives and aesthetics of the Database” was granted an honorary thesis mention from University of Bogotá Jorge Tadeo Lozano. Her work engages with the representation of violence and trauma in cinema, and argues for the cultural mediation of images, particularly as it concerns the processes of memory during the contemporary peace-building efforts of a post-conflict Colombian society. 

References

Bal Mieke et al. Acts of Memory: Cultural Recall in the Present. Dartmouth College: University Press of New England, 1999.

Barthes Roland and Richard Howard. Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography. Hill and Wang, 1981.

Beverley, John. “Los últimos serán los primeros. Notas sobre el cine de Gaviria.” Cuadernos de Cinemateca, 5. Jan. 2004, pp. 78–84.

Caruth Cathy. Trauma: Explorations in Memory. Johns Hopkins University Press 1995.

Cevallos, Francisco and Mauro Cerbino. “Imágenes e imaginarios de la conflictividad juvenil y las organizaciones pandilleras,” Final report for the investigation by FLACSO for the “Nuestros Niños” (‘Our Children’). Program of the Social Wellbeing Ministry, 2003.

Chen-Sham, Jorge. “El lenguaje de las emociones: Afecto y cultura en América Latina.” Revista de Filología y Lingüística de la Universidad de Costa Rica, vol. 40, no. 1, pp. 261+.

Flatley Jonathan. Affective Mapping: Melancholia and the Politics of Modernism. Harvard University Press, 2008.

Gaviria, Víctor. “Violencia, representación y voluntad realista” (interview). Espacio urbano, comunicación y violencia en América Latina, edited by Mabel Moraña. Instituto Internacional de Literatura Iberoamericana, 2002.

Kantaris, Geofrey. “El cine urbano y la tercera violencia colombiana.” Revista Iberoamericana, vol. 74, no. 223, 2018, pp. 455–470.

León, Cristian. El cine de la marginalidad: realismo sucio y violencia urbana. Corporación Editora Nacional, 2005.

Martínez, Maria Paula. “Cine en Colombia: crece en la impopularidad,” El Espectador, November 11th, 2012.

Moraña, Mabel, and Lewis, Bart L. Espacio urbano, comunicación y violencia en América Latina. Instituto Internacional de Literatura Iberoamericana, 2002.

Reber, Elisabeth. “Affectivity in Interaction: Sound objects in English.” English and American Studies in German, vol. 2012, no. 1, 2012, pp. 19–22.

Rodríguez García, José María. “Translator’s Introduction, María Zambrano: Two Essays on Ruins.” Modernist Cultures, vol. 7, no. 1, 2012, pp. 98–131.

Sontag, Susan. Regarding the pain of others / Susan Sontag. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2003.

Suárez, Juana. Cinembargo Colombia: ensayos críticos sobre cine y cultura. Universidad del Valle, 2009.

Zambrano, María. Islas. Verbum, 2007.

Downloads

Published

2022-12-31

How to Cite

Fattori, L. (2022). Remembering Violence in <i>Matar a Jesús</i> (2017). Review of International American Studies, 15(2), 95–107. https://doi.org/10.31261/rias.14719