Lecture held in English by Sarah Ibáñez O’Donnell (MA, University of Heidelberg)
Date: Wednesday, 26 January 2022, 6 pm, via Webex
Moderation: Prof. Dr. Miriam Oesterreich
Feminicides (feminicidios) became a word linked to female bodies – many of them from maquiladoras or textile workers – appearing tortured, murdered and often sexually abused in Ciudad Juarez, at the US-Mexico border in the early 1990s – the same place where activist Susana Chavez, whose poetry gave name to the now global movements Ni Una Mas and Ni Una Menos, was born and murdered. Victims’ families and allies began to denounce these acts of violence by marking them publicly and placing the names of their dead on pink crosses and phone boxes. Such visual and performative practices denouncing violence against women more broadly have become more and more mediated blurring the lines between artistic and activist intervention.