Fenix: Network for Research on Female Exiles, Refugees and Migrants

Our congresses

8th Fenix Congress: PUBLICATIONS

The 8th Fenix-congress (2022) zooms in on Jewish-Latin American and Spanish-Latin American women writers and their search for
identity. The results of this congress are published in four Special Issues, the 11th, 12th, 13th and 14th Special Issue of the Fenix Network.
The series of the 13th and 14th Special Issues, Feminine perspectives on the Jewish and Spanish exiles that Mexico brought together (Miradas femeninas sobre los exilios judío y español que México reunió), are published in the journal Mexican Literature (Open Access, Web of Science ESCI, UNAM, vol 34 N° 2, 2023 and vol 35 N° 1, 2024) and focus on the female writers (descendants) of two emblematic exiles –the Jewish and the Spanish– in Mexico. The studies compiled in this series of Special Issues put into dialogue the literary texts published in the last fifty years (1972-2022) by two different groups of exiled writers, who were united in Mexico. The set of studies proposes a possible new way to address these exiles, not on the basis of ethnic, political, cultural, religious or linguistic differences that separate them, but on the basis of the Mexican context of reception and the feminine identity they have in common.

The 11th and 12th Special issues, Routes of Jewish Latin American Women Writers (1980-2020) toward a sense belonging/ Rutas de autoras judeo-latinoamericanas (1980-2020) hacia un sentido de pertenencia and Spatial Identity: Interviews with Jewish Latin American women writers/ Identidad espacial: Entrevistas con autoras judeo-latinoamericanas are published in América Sin Nombre (Open Access, Web of Science ESC). This Special Issue juxtaposes different itineraries constructed by Jewish-Latin American writers toward the roots and aims at understanding the diversity and unity of these routes and journeys. The 12th Special Issue includes interviews with  Jewish Latin American women writers on spatial identity negotiation across generations The Special Issue focuses primarily on three dimensions of this diversity/unity: the spatial dimension (1), the
temporal dimension (2), and the imaginative dimension (3). In what way(s) do the routes traced
between the territories of the ancestors and the new host territories relate to the geopolitical map
in which the boundaries of the nation-state predominate? How do the past and the present
dialogue in these journeys towards a sense of belonging? How do reality and imagination interact
in the depiction of the place of origin? These are the questions that guide our exploration.

Abstracts

Participants

Programa