Shattered Voices. Teresa Godwin Phelps

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Shattered Voices - Teresa Godwin Phelps


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       Shattered Voices

       Pennsylvania Studies in Human Rights

      Bert B. Lockwood, Jr., Series Editor

      A complete list of books in the series is available from the publisher.

       Shattered Voices

       Language, Violence, and the Work of Truth Commissions

       Teresa Godwin Phelps

      University of Pennsylvania Press

      Philadelphia

      Copyright © 2004 University of Pennsylvania Press

      All rights reserved

      Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper

      10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

      Published by

      University of Pennsylvania Press

      Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104–4011

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Phelps, Teresa Godwin.

      Shattered voices : language, violence, and the work of truth commissions / Teresa Godwin Phelps.

      p. cm.—(Pennsylvania studies in human rights)

      ISBN 0-8122-3797-8 (alk. paper)

      Includes bibliographical references and index.

      1. Truth commissions. 2. Human rights. 3. Reconciliation. 4. Governmental investigations. I. Title. II. Series

      JC580 .P48 2004

323.4′9—dc22 2004041498

      For Bill

      Phelps, Teresa Godwin.

       Contents

       Prologue for Paulina

       1. The Demise of Paulina’s Good: From Personal Revenge to State Punishment

       2. The Demonizing of Revenge

       3. Language, Violence, and Oppression

       4. What Can Stories Do?

       5. Telling Stories in a Search for Justice: The Argentinian, Chilean, and Salvadoran Truth Commissions

       6. Telling Stories in a Search for More Than Justice: The South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission

       7. The Truth Must Dazzle Gradually

       Notes

       Bibliography

       Index

       Acknowledgments

       Prologue for Paulina

      In the winter of 1992 in London, I attended one of the first performances in English of Death and the Maiden, a play by Chilean writer Ariel Dorfman. Juliet Stevenson’s brilliant depiction of Paulina Salas presented a transfixed audience with a compelling question: what happens when a new and tenuous democracy, because of political necessity, turns its back on some of the victims of the regime it has replaced? Paulina is just such a victim, and the play provides a troubling answer.

      The play opens when Gerardo, Paulina’s husband, returns very late to the isolated house he shares with Paulina. He is late because he had a flat tire and was rescued and driven home by a considerate stranger, Dr. Roberto Miranda. Paulina hears only voices outside as she waits inside the darkened house, clutching a gun and “rolled into a foetus-like position.”1 Gerardo, a lawyer, is returning from a meeting with the country’s president, the most “important meeting of my whole life,”2 in which he has been named head of a commission that will investigate some crimes committed by the recently displaced military dictatorship. The initial dialogue between Paulina and Gerardo reveals that Paulina’s response to the voices outside was typical: she has frequent breakdowns resulting from her treatment when she, as an activist student fifteen years in the past, was kidnapped and tortured. Rather than pleasing her, however, Gerardo’s appointment to head the commission further disturbs her:

Paulina: This Commission you’re named to. Doesn’t it only investigate cases that ended in death?
Gerardo: It’s appointed to investigate human rights’ violations that ended in death or the presumption of death, yes.
Paulina: Only the most serious cases?
Gerardo: The idea is that if we can cast light on the worst crimes, other abuses will come to light.
Paulina: Only the most serious?
Gerardo: Those beyond redemption.
Paulina: Only those beyond redemption, huh?
Gerardo: I don’t like to talk about this, Paulina.
Paulina: I don’t like to talk about it either.3

      Paulina’s fragile emotional state is thrown into turmoil by this official pronouncement in which her husband is complicitous: her kidnapping and torture will not be investigated because they are not considered to be among the “most serious” crimes committed during the dictatorship. For all official purposes, her pain and humiliation did not happen and she is forced back into her ongoing silence—“I don’t like to talk about this, Paulina.” The “this” is ambiguous: does Gerardo not like to talk about the Commission’s limited mandate or, more tellingly, does he not like to talk about what happened to Paulina? Paulina, in fact, has told Gerardo very little about her imprisonment and the treatment she received; she has not even told him that her torture included rape.4 The political process, she now discovers, promises only that her silence must continue. The new government, the government in whose cause she refused to give over names, including Gerardo’s, will not take retribution for her.

      An hour later, after Gerardo and Paulina have gone to bed, Roberto Miranda, the stranger who assisted Gerardo with his flat tire, reappears to return Gerardo’s patched tire, which was inadvertently left in his trunk and because he heard on his car radio that Gerardo Escobar, the very man he aided, has been named to head the president’s


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