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When Women Kill

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A genre-bending feminist account of four Chilean women who committed the double transgression of murder, violating not only criminal law but also the invisible laws of gender.
Women Who Kill: Four Crimes Retold analyzes four homicides carried out by Chilean women over the course of the twentieth century. Drawing on her training as a lawyer, Alia Trabucco Zerán offers a nuanced close reading of their lives and crimes, foregoing sensationalism in order to dissect how all four were both perpetrators of violent acts and victims of another, more insidious kind of violence. This radical retelling challenges the archetype of the woman murderer and reveals another narrative, one as disturbing and provocative as the transgressions themselves: What makes women lash out against the restraints of gendered domesticity, and how do we—readers, viewers, the media, the art world, the political establishment—treat them when they do?
Expertly intertwining true crime, critical essay, and research diary, International Booker Prize finalist Alia Trabucco Zerán (The Remainder), in a translation by Sophie Hughes, brings an overdue feminist perspective to the study of deviant women.

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    • Kirkus

      Starred review from February 15, 2022
      A Chilean author reconstructs the details of four significant 20th-century murders orchestrated by Chilean women. Trabucco Zer�n begins with the case of Corina Rojas, an upper-class housewife who hired a man named Alberto Duarte to kill her husband, David D�az Mu�oz, to escape a "loveless marriage" in which she felt like the "victim of a miserly and unfaithful husband." The author continues with the case of news vendor Rosa Fa�ndez Cavieres, who murdered her husband, Efra�n Santander, and then carved his corpse into multiple pieces in a futile attempt to hide the body. Next is Mar�a Carolina Geel, who shot her lover in broad daylight at the Hotel Crill�n. Trabucco Zer�n ends with Mar�a Teresa Alfaro, a live-in nanny who murdered her employer's children and mother. The cases occurred in 1916, 1923, 1955, and 1963, respectively, spanning the 20th century. Rather than further sensationalizing these crimes, the author uses these women's action--and, perhaps more importantly, the public reaction to their stories--to reflect on society's shifting attitudes about gender, anger, violence, and the law. "Their crimes, while disturbing, are a privileged window from which to observe how the very meaning of womanhood has changed over time," she writes. "Their contradictions and failures act as a mirror, reflecting back typically 'un-feminine' emotions." Interspersed with cogent feminist analyses of the crimes and the public and media reactions of the time, Trabucco Zer�n includes diary entries describing her personal experience with the research, infusing the book with a fascinating memoirlike quality and rendering the narrative voice both personal and relatable: "I had to doubt the word of lawyers and doctors, question the sensationalism of reporters, take novel plots with a pinch of salt, and slowly learn that a question is often a veiled accusation." Throughout, the language is both precise and evocative, and the author's evaluation of the various circumstances is readable, trenchant, and intersectional. A formally inventive, lyrical, feminist analysis of Chile's famous female murderers.

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  • English

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