Entre Fantasmas May 2026

"Entre Fantasmas" is a concept that appears across various literary and artistic contexts, most notably in the critical analysis of work and Anadeli Bencomo’s examinations of Mexican chronicles.

: 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 Entre Fantasmas

In the context of Valeria Luiselli's novel Los ingrávidos (Faces in the Crowd), the idea of living "entre fantasmas" serves as a central poetic of memory . Luiselli uses the "ghost" not as a supernatural element, but as a structural device to link different timelines and geographies—specifically contemporary New York and the Mexico City of the past. "Entre Fantasmas" is a concept that appears across

: Recent essays like Tierra de mujeres connect modern Spanish women with their "first-wave" ancestors as ghosts. Here, being "among ghosts" is a radical act of reclaiming a suppressed feminist lineage. Conclusion Luiselli uses the "ghost" not as a supernatural