Artículo de revista
Feminicide as ‘act’ and ‘process’: a geography of gendered violence in Oaxaca
Fecha
2016Registro en:
Martin, P. M., & Carvajal, N. (2016). Feminicide as ‘act’ and ‘process’: A geography of gendered violence in oaxaca. [El feminicidio como `acción' y `proceso': una geografía de la violencia de género en el Estado de Oaxaca] Gender, Place and Culture, 23(7), 989-1002. doi:10.1080/0966369X.2015.1073693
10.1080/0966369X.2015.1073693
Autor
Martin, Patricia M.
Carvajal, Nohora
Resumen
Abstract: Feminicide in Mexico is most notoriously associated with the serial deaths of women in and around Ciudad Juárez. A 2005 congressional investigation expanded, nonetheless, the geographical scope of feminicide, arguing that the phenomenon was present throughout the country. One location that was identified early on as also experiencing a high rate of feminicide was the state of Oaxaca, in the southern part of Mexico. Inscribed within this shifting geopolitical terrain, this article draws on an understanding of feminicide as both act and process in order to offer a critical portrayal of feminicide in Oaxaca. Beginning with a discussion of the profiles of feminicide in Oaxaca, the analysis moves out to explore the multifaceted processes that enable feminicide to occur. In so doing, we also explore how feminicide intertwines with other forms of social and political violence in Oaxaca. From an ethical-moral terrain, this article joins a broader movement in certain corners of feminist geography that is concerned with ‘making bodies count’ and the politics of witnessing acts of violence.