“…Thus, when I speak about rendering trauma audible, I mean by this, too, understanding it as meaningful, listening to it as ‘making sense’ instead of discarding it as nonsensical or renouncing the possibility of its communicability. I mean, ultimately, not only listening to the ways in which trauma speaks, but also listening to it as believable without questioning its legitimacy, and as rememberable, as worthy of being registered and recognized as historical truth (see Acosta López, 2020a and 2022a). For that to be possible, we also need to revise what we mean by historical truths, what we consider worthy of remembrance, and how memory and history are intertwined with our criteria for believability and audibility (see Acosta López, 2022b).…”