Entre Fantasmas Here

: In this framework, "fantasmas" represent the marginalized populations and the "disappeared." The city itself becomes a spectral archive where the writer must find the "witnesses" among the ruins of the Mexican landscape. Socio-Political Haunting in the Spanish Context

The following essay explores "Entre Fantasmas" (Among Ghosts) through these lenses, focusing on how memory, urban space, and historical trauma manifest as spectral presences in contemporary Spanish-language literature. Memory as a Structural Force: Valeria Luiselli Entre Fantasmas

: By placing the narrator "among ghosts," Luiselli suggests that memory is not a linear history but a spatial experience where the past and present occupy the same room. The characters are not haunted by spirits, but by the echoes of their own lives and the literary figures they obsess over. Landscapes of the Disappeared: Anadeli Bencomo : In this framework, "fantasmas" represent the marginalized

: The ghostly representation of the desaparecidos serves as a way for survivors to process trauma. These "ghosts" lurk in obsessive thoughts and dreams, evidencing the lack of closure in a state where a body is never found. The characters are not haunted by spirits, but

In her critical work Entre héroes, fantasmas y apocalípticos (Between Heroes, Ghosts, and Apocalyptics), Anadeli Bencomo examines how the Mexican chronicle uses these archetypes to describe a landscape of social and political crisis.

Beyond specific titles, "entre fantasmas" often refers to the liminal nature of disappearance and historical memory in Argentina and Spain.