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      • December 2020

        Violencias contra las mujeres. Relaciones en contexto

        by Silvina Alvarez Medina y Paola Bergallo (coords.)

        This work was generated around a common concern for gender-based violence, its meanings, scope and legal strategies to address it, together with the need for a relational approach, attentive to the contexts in which violence takes place. In its first part, some issues related to principles and concepts are introduced, the clarification of which enables a better understanding of violence and contextual analysis to highlight the need to take into account the circumstances surrounding the victims of gender violence. The work also provides a study of masculinities, that is, a look from men, from the masculine position and meaning. Second, through the study of femicide, the criminal policy options that several Latin American countries have opted for, on the one hand, and Spain, on the other, are analyzed. The focus is also on violence against women in relation to their most intimate affective circle, mainly daughters and sons. In the third part of the book, dedicated to sexual violence, rape and the various legal approaches that have accompanied it are analyzed, and its repercussions on armed conflicts are studied. Finally, the fourth part delves into the study of international human rights law on gender and violence, emerging rights and constitutional worldviews. Throughout the articles that we present here, a common thread can be traced that emphasizes questioning the standard legal perspective, inherited from patriarchal models, anchored in the masculine vision of the law. The works gathered in this book propose a longer and more complex look, capable of unveiling social and cultural meanings that go through the bodies and lives of women in situations of violence. This gaze does not only interrogate women and men who are protagonists of conflicts of violence; it goes further, to encompass relationships in context.

      • Fiction

        The Light in Isabel's Eyes

        by Edmée Pardo

        Four characters cross paths in a hospital: a woman about to give birth; a family facing the inexplicable death of one of their own; a man who falls ill; and a teenager persecuted among hundreds of women in an oppressive town. Their life is intertwined with secondary characters with whom they mix as they walk towards their separate destinies. In a violent city in the middle of the desert, death, birth, love, pain, and revenge are joined by the shadow of God or maybe by the shadow casted by his absence. Weaved in a net of actions that develops at full speed through a clean and poetic prose, this is a story that hurts and heals at the same time. This novel speaks of God and Spirit, of inner strength and emptiness, of solitude and communion, also of hope.

      • Crime & mystery
        March 2005

        Desert Blood

        The Juárez Murders

        by Alicia Gaspar de Alba

        An incisive and thrilling mystery that delves into the violent deaths of young women plaguing the U.S. / Mexico border.

      • August 2020

        Baldías

        by Laura Rossi

        After being burned, women's dead bodies are thrown in a wasteland located in a suburb heart. The killers are 'common men', trying to get away with it. Their voices and many others build this novel to show how the indiference of a society makes violence and mistreat a natural thing and becomes a fertile field for impunity.

      • August 2021

        La banda oriental

        by Paloma Vidal

        A girl lives in the little house out back of a mansion in Punta del Este with her aunt and dog. The owners of the house are Brazilians who summer on the Uruguayan coast. The girl spends her afternoons near the black pool in the garden with the dog, while the aunt tends to the owners and their guests. The dog follows her, accompanies her, cares for her.  With quirky language taken to the minimal expression, a novel combination of registers and theatrical logic, Paloma Vidal skillfully traps us in a suspenseful story between the magical and the sinister.

      • Children's & YA
        June 2020

        CRIMES AND PUNISHMENTS

        by Severino Rodrigues, Regina Drummond, Flávia Cortês, Luis Eduardo Matta, Shirley Souza, Luís Dill, Rosana Rios

        Great Russian author, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, wrote a wonderful novel about guilt, taking responsibility and human weakness. Crimes and punishments is a tribute to that literary genius, in which seven authors discuss some very delicate and very contemporary problems. It could happen to any one of us.

      • Fiction

        The Reason We Remain

        by Marlen Pelny

        This novel begins with the murder of 14-year-old Etty – and ends with it, too. Just the way that for Heide, Etty’s mother, life is over to a certain extent but, at the same time, beginning again anew. Because: it’s governed by a new rhythm. From now on, Heide will always be half composed of her missing daughter. From now on, her existence will centre on the question of how to go on living. How to get out of bed each day. How to go on living in the apartment that was also Etty’s home. How to remember her laugh, her cheeky answers, her delicate facial features without falling apart. The people Heide can rely on for support are her closest friends. And us. With impressive precision, Marlen Pelny portrays violence where it actually happens: in our immediate vicinity. Writing with clarity but not voyeurism, unsparingly yet not brutally, she tells a finely drawn, complex story of loss and solidarity, of grief and love – of an aftermath. In the end, we are united. In the end, we are many. In the end, this novel is a linguistically powerful revolt: against fatal injustices. Against the violence we encounter on a daily basis and which we try to survive.

      • Literature & Literary Studies
        March 2021

        How to Think Like Ulysses

        What the Classics Can Teach Us about Life

        by Bianca Sorrentino

        What can the Trojan War tell us about women’s empowerment and immigration? What can the myth of Ulysses tell us about human agency when it is pitted against seemingly unsourmountable circumstances? And what about Orpheus? What can his figure teach us about humanity and its relationship with death? We tend to look at the Classics as dusty, as things from the past, something to study in a college course, but the truth is that they are far more modern than we think, and they can shed a marvellous light on what it means to be humans in the 21st century. Written with a charming levity that cleverly masks years of research, How to Think Like Ulysses is a heartfelt plea to rediscovers the literary wonders of the ancient world and to heed their lesson: life in our contemporary world may be very much different from Athens in the 5th century B.C., but perhaps we didn’t change as much.

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