Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Following the traces: methodology
Chapter 3: Memorials to the disappeared
Chapter 4: Memoryscapes
Chapter 5: Bordando por la paz y la memoria
Chapter 6: The presence of absence
Chapter 7: Huellas de la memoria
Chapter 8: The search
Chapter 9: The politics of memoryscapes of disappearance
Chapter 10: Conclusion
Index
Biography
Danielle House has worked in academic, public, and community sectors. She explored her academic interest in the crossover of geography, memory, disappearance, and collaborative research practice in her doctoral research in the Department of International Politics at Aberystwyth University, Wales. This formed the basis of this book, her first monograph. Her research and practice has spanned several fields, including death and dying, arts-based and creative methods, Latin American politics, planning and regeneration, and public health. She is co-editor of the volume New Perspectives on Urban Deathscapes (2022) and coordinated several UK exhibitions on disappearance and violence in Mexico. She is currently Research Fellow in the Centre for Public Health, University of Bristol, UK.
"Memoryscapes of Disappearance in Mexico is a timely and necessary account of enforced disappearances in Mexico, and of the everyday experience of living with absence. Danielle House writes with careful ethnographic attention, grounded in sustained relationships with families, activists, and artists engaged in struggles for truth and justice. Rather than treating disappearances and acts of memory as a response to past events, the book shows how absence is lived in the present tense, as an ongoing disruption to social, legal, and temporal orders. Moving beyond dominant frameworks of memorialisation that seek closure or reconciliation, House advances an original methodological approach centred on material practices, objects, and spaces — from textiles and shoes to streets, homes, and public spaces — to demonstrate how memory is experienced, negotiated, and politically generative in conditions of ongoing violence. Memoryscapes of Disappearance in Mexicorepresents a significant and original contribution to scholarship on memory and violence, with implications far beyond the Mexican case."
- Alexandra Délano Alonso, Professor of Politics and Global Studies at The New School
"Centring the struggles for justice and truth of relatives and supporters of Mexico’s disappeared, this carefully written book weaves together insightful explorations of living forms of memory – from anti-monuments to embroidery groups - whose creators refuse the depoliticisation and silencing of the forced disappearance of their loved ones. The powerful thread of the presence of absence running through the chapters makes their grief tangible, and yet their resistance also gives hope that different ways of being and caring are possible. This is a necessary reading for anyone interested in a critical approach to memory and justice in violent contexts in Mexico and beyond."
- Berit Bliesemann de Guevara, Professor of International Politics at Aberystwyth University






