Public History on Film: The Silence of Others (2018)

Type of Presentation

Paper

Location

D34170

Start Date

4-16-2025 10:00 AM

End Date

4-16-2025 10:30 AM

Description of Program

The 2018 film The Silence of Others explores post-dictatorship Spain by following survivors of war and dictatorship and their descendants in their quest for justice and recognition. We will discuss how the film demonstrates that collaboration between people with lived experiences and experts in history, archaeology, and film is essential for bridging the gaps between personal memory and historical record.

Abstract

The 2018 film The Silence of Others explores post-dictatorship Spain by following survivors and their descendants as they seek justice and recognition for the violence, repression, and human rights violations of Francisco Franco’s regime (1939-1975). The film not only documents their struggle but also engages in public history by using a choral narrative with visual and sound techniques that immerse audiences in collective memory experiences. Both in its storytelling, production, and premiere, The Silence of Others demonstrates that collaboration between people with lived experiences and experts in history, archaeology, and film is essential for bridging the gaps between personal memory and historical record. The continued existence of Spain’s 1977 Amnesty Law, which conferred amnesty on all sides, contributes to the country’s fractured memory, making it necessary to weave together survivor testimony and expert knowledge to reconstruct a fuller, more accurate past. Drawing on Katharine T. Corbett and Howard S. Miller’s discussion of shared inquiry, we argue that the film serves as a model for how acknowledging collective memory as trauma requires shared authority to ensure historical accuracy and support the healing process. In this way, The Silence of Others contributes to the discourse pivot toward recognition and justice that was formalized by the Asociación para la Recuperación de la Memoria Histórica (ARMH) in 2000, and that continues today in the news media, on film, and in literature.

Faculty / Staff Sponsor

Dr. Novia Pagone

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Apr 16th, 10:00 AM Apr 16th, 10:30 AM

Public History on Film: The Silence of Others (2018)

D34170

The 2018 film The Silence of Others explores post-dictatorship Spain by following survivors and their descendants as they seek justice and recognition for the violence, repression, and human rights violations of Francisco Franco’s regime (1939-1975). The film not only documents their struggle but also engages in public history by using a choral narrative with visual and sound techniques that immerse audiences in collective memory experiences. Both in its storytelling, production, and premiere, The Silence of Others demonstrates that collaboration between people with lived experiences and experts in history, archaeology, and film is essential for bridging the gaps between personal memory and historical record. The continued existence of Spain’s 1977 Amnesty Law, which conferred amnesty on all sides, contributes to the country’s fractured memory, making it necessary to weave together survivor testimony and expert knowledge to reconstruct a fuller, more accurate past. Drawing on Katharine T. Corbett and Howard S. Miller’s discussion of shared inquiry, we argue that the film serves as a model for how acknowledging collective memory as trauma requires shared authority to ensure historical accuracy and support the healing process. In this way, The Silence of Others contributes to the discourse pivot toward recognition and justice that was formalized by the Asociación para la Recuperación de la Memoria Histórica (ARMH) in 2000, and that continues today in the news media, on film, and in literature.