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- W197628968 abstract "When imaginary sources of social transformation interact with historical determinants of transitional Spain, new symbolic possibilities arise from which gender issues come to be addressed anew. This essay investigates historical and fictional fusion of two female subjects, mother and daughter, whose visions of social and personal revolution collide in a famous case of feminist filicide. Aurora Rodriguez Caballeira stated on more than one occasion that, upon publishing Cain y Abel: Una injusticia in Socialist newspaper La Tierra in June 1933, her daughter Hildegart had signed her own death sentence. The article was written only a month before Aurora shot and killed her eighteen-year-old daughter and remains a testament to a notorious act of filicide that took place in Madrid, Spain, on 9 June 1933. The focus of numerous interpretations of historical implications of event has been murderous mother, while her prodigal daughter Hildegart, politically and socially active under Second Spanish Republic (1931-36), has remained in shadow of her own victimization. Hildegart was famous at an early age for her controversial publications on politics and sexual difference during brief Republican period of liberal governance. In her short life, she published numerous essays for national newspapers along with several books addressing various facets of struggle to emancipate women and working classes. These accomplishments, however, have been sadly overshadowed by her mother's notoriety. In Spain, especially, two women's lives have been fused together through historical chronicle (De Guzman), sociological investigation (Llarch), psychoanalytical study (Rendueles), and a commercially successful film re-enactment of tragedy (Fernan Gomez). What these diverse investigations have in common is male authorship, publication under developments and governance (1972, 1979, 1999, and 1989), and a certain reliance on Aurora as their main conduit to course of events leading to a case of personal and political homicide. After sensational trials and imprisonment of accused, Rodriguez Story was buried under political and social upheavals of 1936, when Ideological extremes came to an irreconcilable impasse. As Burnett Bolloten recognizes, the enmities that gave rise to Civil War were not of sudden growth. They had been steadily developing since fall of Monarchy and proclamation of Republic in April 1931 and, with increasing intensity, since victory of Popular Front--the left coalition--in February 1936 elections(3). After Francoist victory in 1939, memory of Aurora and Hildegart remained hidden within folds of fascist regime's Catholic National Revivalism campaign of selective historical revisionism. The regime's preference for glorious deeds of a more distant past, strict censorship laws and imprisonment or exile of numerous journalists from Republican period prevented case's re-emergence until transitional developments in 1970s. Originally written in 1934, historical chronicle Aurora de sangre was published by Republican journalist Eduardo De Guzman in 1972, who had suffered professionally as had so many under dictatorship. Serving as guiding force of film, De Guzman's chronical was reissued in 1977 under film's title, Mi hija Hildegart. In short, De Guzaman's series of interviews with Aurora initiated a trend of democratic interrogation. De Guzman's historical chronicle invokes doubts about relying on mother's confession for key information. Allowed to interview accused in prison, he and a friend are both intrigued and disturbed by her eloquence: We listen to her with interest, but also with a certain degree of skepticism. Aurora Rodriguez is a strange and disquieting woman. Much of what she says is surprising and even more so her way of expressing it: impressive coldness with which she speaks of murder of her own daughter, admitting that it was inevitable fruit born by long and terrible premeditation. …" @default.
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- W197628968 date "2003-09-01" @default.
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- W197628968 title "Defying the Past in Post-Franco Spain: The Interrogation of Aurora Rodriguez" @default.
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