{"id":6396,"date":"2011-07-13T09:00:31","date_gmt":"2011-07-13T08:00:31","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=6396"},"modified":"2011-07-13T09:00:31","modified_gmt":"2011-07-13T08:00:31","slug":"violence-against-women-in-peru-and-the-films-of-claudia-llosa","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/07\/13\/violence-against-women-in-peru-and-the-films-of-claudia-llosa\/","title":{"rendered":"Violence against women in Peru and the films of Claudia Llosa"},"content":{"rendered":"
Fausta and her mother in The Milk of Sorrow<\/p><\/div>\n
There are times when I\u2019m glad I live in such a blinkered cultural bubble,
with only a dim grasp of global politics. Case in point: while I was
enraptured by Mysterious Cities of Gold<\/strong><\/a> in the 1980s, the real-life land
of the Incas – Peru – was being torn apart by a bloody internal conflict<\/a> between communist guerrilla army
the Shining Path and government security forces.<\/p>\n
I was only five, of course. But when I watched it again at university (a
rite of passage, surely?) only a year after the conflict had wound down, I
was none the wiser. In fact, in some senses it hasn\u2019t really ended.
The latest reported attack by Shining Path rebels was in April
2010.<\/p>\n
Between 1980 and 2000 some 70,000 people died, including huge numbers of
civilians. Countless survivors are still in search of justice, including
the thousands of women who were victims of sexual violence and humiliation
at the hands of soldiers.<\/p>\n
It is this situation that is addressed in Peruvian director
Claudia Llosa<\/strong>\u2019s 2009 film,
The Milk of Sorrow<\/strong>. The film is based on the book
Entre Pr\u00f3jimos<\/strong> by Kimberly Theidon, which
collected testimonies from women who had experienced sexual
violence, including brutal gang rape (here’s an interview<\/a> with Theidon). Many of the women
Theidon spoke to reported a belief that the trauma they had
experienced had somehow been transmitted to their children through
their breastmilk. Llosa claims in this Birds
Eye View<\/a> interview that this is a genuine belief (hm\u2026)
but either way it is certainly a good expression of the severe
psychological damage and lingering emotional distress caused by
conflict to individuals and entire communities.<\/p>\n
The film follows Fausta, a young woman whose mother was raped
during the war, and who believes she has been fed on the milk of
sorrow. Another character says that children like her have no
souls; they have fled for fear. Fausta is so afraid of her
mother\u2019s fate she inserts a potato into her vagina as a
guard against rape. Here\u2019s the trailer
for the film<\/a>.<\/p>\n
Llosa’s first film is also set in Peru, also deals with
sexual violence, and stars the same actress, Magaly
Solier<\/a>.
Madeinusa<\/strong> (2006) is on the one hand a bit of a
fairytale, about an invented religious custom in a fictional
Andean village. But on the other hand it deals with poverty,
rape, incest, murder and child abuse. In the village in which
14 year old Madeinusa lives, between Good Friday and Easter
Sunday Christ is dead, so there is no sin. Or rather, your
sins don’t count. Beautiful scenery, gut-wrenching
scenes. It’s bleak – there’s no wholly
sympathetic character in the whole film, and even the everyman
‘good guy’ is happy to take advantage of
Madeinusa’s teenage interest in him. She emerges
triumphant, after a fashion. Here’s the
trailer (in Spanish)<\/a>.<\/p>\n
While I think both
Madeinusa<\/strong> and
The Milk of Sorrow<\/strong> are stunning bits of
cinema, they do make me uncomfortable, as both films
and their director have been accused of racism in
their portrayal of the indigenous population of Peru
as superstitious, vicious and backward. Llosa belongs
to the Peruvian white urban elite, and in fact now
lives in Spain. The charge levelled at her is that she
has used the stories and experiences of Andean women
to turn a profit but without showing respect for
indigenous communities or involving native people in
the project in more than a superficial way. Carlos
in DC<\/a> sees this as emblematic of the inequality
in Peruvian society:<\/p>\n
I have witnessed the racial and cultural
discrimination that our Indigenous peoples face in
Peru, especially in the city of Lima where we are
discriminated by our accents, ways of living and
traditions. At the same time, Lima profits from
our cultures and resources.<\/p>\n
To me,
The Milk of Sorrow<\/strong> symbolizes that
racial and economical division exactly. A
filmmaker from Lima and her producers from
Europe are using the sad experiences and the
suffering of our Andean women as a topic for
their profitable film.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
It\u2019s that old chestnut again: by
representing and discussing sexual violence
and using real testimonies to inform your
representation, are you reinforcing a message
of victimhood and exploiting the women whose
experiences you use? Worse still, are you at
risk of producing something titillating?
It\u2019s a tough one even without the
dimension of race, which clearly can\u2019t be
ignored in the Latin American context (or,
well, anywhere really).
The Milk of Sorrow<\/strong>, more than
Madeinusa<\/strong>, has served to raise
awareness of sexual violence in conflict,
and Magaly Solier has also supported an
anti-violence against women campaign, so
perhaps there\u2019s the social good
silver lining.<\/p>\n
Lots of impatient
IMDb<\/strong> reviews urge people
just to enjoy the films as art and
stop worrying about the politics. I
think that is exactly the wrong
approach. Whatever else Claudia
Llosa\u2019s films are, they are an
opportunity to talk about things which
don\u2019t often get an airing;
painful, complex things which need to
be voiced.<\/p>\n
I’m trying to pay attention
to things that are happening in
the world wider than London, and
especially learning about and
learning from the women’s
movement in other
countries.<\/p>\n
Happily, I got to meet women from
two leading feminist organisations
in Peru –
DEMUS<\/strong> and
Fepromu<\/strong> – at
a Womankind
Worldwide<\/strong><\/a>
event in April, where they
spoke about their work. You
can watch subtitled films of
their talks here<\/a>
and here<\/a>
if you’d like to know
more about what it’s
like working for
women’s rights in
Latin America.<\/p>\n
There’s also this interesting
article<\/a> about the
relationship between
development, Western
feminism and the
grassroots women’s
movement in Peru, centred
around the network of comedores<\/a>.<\/p>\n
The Milk of Sorrow<\/h3>\n
Explaining or exploiting?<\/h3>\n
<\/a><\/p>\n
Feminism in Peru<\/h3>\n