During the 2010s, Tamaulipas, a border state in northern Mexico, became a “silenced zone” for journalism as a result of the Mexican Drug War. In 2016, during an international theatre festival in the port of Tampico, the Stultifera Navis Institutom collective intervened at the headquarters of what used to be one of the most important journals in the city. The building, located in downtown Tampico, had been abandoned for thirty-three years. For three days, we brought the newspaper “back to life,” using only fake news. This essay recovers the experience of this multidisciplinary site-specific intervention by casting a critical look at its theoretical foundation in Jacques Derrida’s concept of “Hauntology” and Georges Didi-Huberman’s method...
In Mexico, every two days a journalist suffers some kind of aggression. This is indicated in the Cen...
This research was made possible by an Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) grant (No: AH/P005...
In this article, I will describe the mostly invisibilized “fight for rehumanization” of the families...
As violence spiked in Mexico in clashes between drug trafficking organizations and law enforcement, ...
This article describes the context that the city of Chihuahua, Mexico witnessed during the years 200...
This article describes the context that the city of Chihuahua, Mexico witnessed during the years 200...
This article explains how mass media and U.S. political rhetoric have created a spectacle of borde...
Examines the culture of bribery, extortion, and police complicity; murders and kidnappings of journa...
Reporting on drug trafficking could be considered complex from any point of view. The difficulties o...
A new generation of writers in Mexico City are not playing the role of national intellectuals as pre...
Among the many outcomes of the so-called War on Drugs, Mexico has become one of the most dangerous c...
This short essay is about impression—gut feelings combined with a certain amount of analytical skill...
This work was written to explore the print media’s portrayal of the Mexican war on drugs started by ...
La presente comunicación analiza las relaciones entre periodismo literario y conflicto social a part...
In times of crisis, citizens' support for democracy can depend on how well they think their democrac...
In Mexico, every two days a journalist suffers some kind of aggression. This is indicated in the Cen...
This research was made possible by an Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) grant (No: AH/P005...
In this article, I will describe the mostly invisibilized “fight for rehumanization” of the families...
As violence spiked in Mexico in clashes between drug trafficking organizations and law enforcement, ...
This article describes the context that the city of Chihuahua, Mexico witnessed during the years 200...
This article describes the context that the city of Chihuahua, Mexico witnessed during the years 200...
This article explains how mass media and U.S. political rhetoric have created a spectacle of borde...
Examines the culture of bribery, extortion, and police complicity; murders and kidnappings of journa...
Reporting on drug trafficking could be considered complex from any point of view. The difficulties o...
A new generation of writers in Mexico City are not playing the role of national intellectuals as pre...
Among the many outcomes of the so-called War on Drugs, Mexico has become one of the most dangerous c...
This short essay is about impression—gut feelings combined with a certain amount of analytical skill...
This work was written to explore the print media’s portrayal of the Mexican war on drugs started by ...
La presente comunicación analiza las relaciones entre periodismo literario y conflicto social a part...
In times of crisis, citizens' support for democracy can depend on how well they think their democrac...
In Mexico, every two days a journalist suffers some kind of aggression. This is indicated in the Cen...
This research was made possible by an Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) grant (No: AH/P005...
In this article, I will describe the mostly invisibilized “fight for rehumanization” of the families...