The rhetoric of repression: surveillance and overcrowding in Diamela Eltit´s Fuerzas Especiales

Authors

  • Felipe Arancibia Venegas Universidad de Playa Ancha

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32735/S0718-2201202100052880

Keywords:

Overcrowding, poverty, violence, Damiela Eltit, rhetorical figures

Abstract

This work analyzes the book Fuerzas Especiales (2013) regarding how some specific elements, namely: overcrowding, poverty and violence restrict the subjectivities of the main characters, creating an unchanging tension. Likewise, it examines the language that has been used by Eltit as for the use of rhetorical figures and how these ones make up a deadly discourse whose reading is shifted toward dark and abstruse territories. These territories are dominated by a nation whose essence is unveiled through a rhetoric that socially and politically is allegorized by way of a physic and symbolic language –the rhetoric of repression– that compels its characters to become part of a dialectic that locks up and confines their lives and souls; however, it opens up a possibility to stoically resist a segregating ideology that surveils and limits any glimmer of emancipation.

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Author Biography

Felipe Arancibia Venegas, Universidad de Playa Ancha

Universidad de Playa Ancha

Published

2021-07-19

How to Cite

Arancibia Venegas, F. (2021). The rhetoric of repression: surveillance and overcrowding in Diamela Eltit´s Fuerzas Especiales. ALPHA. Revista De Artes, Letras Y Filosofía, 1(52), 11–30. https://doi.org/10.32735/S0718-2201202100052880

Issue

Section

Articles