2022
DOI: 10.1163/15691640-12341496
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Gramáticas de lo inaudito as Decolonial Grammars: Notes for a Decolonization of Listening

Abstract: This paper proposes to reflect self-critically on an ongoing research project entitled “Grammars of listening,” which started as a philosophical approach to the question of listening at the site of trauma and the challenges this kind of listening poses to our conceptions of memory and history, and has recently shifted to asking about the possible limitations to such a reflection when confronted with a decolonial perspective on temporality. I start by presenting a conceptual background for my inquiry, and askin… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
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“…What one hears in testimonies coming out of traumatic forms of violence is the shattering of all available grammars to make sense of what is being communicated. This is due, on the one hand, to the unprecedented forms of violence to which they bear witness (forms of violence that many times are also directed towards destroying and controlling the means for their representation, see Acosta López, 2022a), and thus to the lack of available categories that can properly render intelligible (even audible) what is being conveyed. It is also due, on the other hand, to the fact that the form of experience struggling to communicate itself is one we are not accustomed to recognizing as experience, since it radically challenges the frameworks that allow us to make sense of a story in its telling (see also Acosta López, 2019b).…”
Section: Listening To Trauma: a Philosophical Perspectivementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…What one hears in testimonies coming out of traumatic forms of violence is the shattering of all available grammars to make sense of what is being communicated. This is due, on the one hand, to the unprecedented forms of violence to which they bear witness (forms of violence that many times are also directed towards destroying and controlling the means for their representation, see Acosta López, 2022a), and thus to the lack of available categories that can properly render intelligible (even audible) what is being conveyed. It is also due, on the other hand, to the fact that the form of experience struggling to communicate itself is one we are not accustomed to recognizing as experience, since it radically challenges the frameworks that allow us to make sense of a story in its telling (see also Acosta López, 2019b).…”
Section: Listening To Trauma: a Philosophical Perspectivementioning
confidence: 99%
“…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).…”
Section: Listening To Trauma: a Philosophical Perspectivementioning
confidence: 99%
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