The Tiniest Place: Memory, Transcorporeality and Ecological Reclaiming in Tatiana Huezo's "El Lugar Más Pequeño"

Document Type

Book Chapter

Publication Date

3-2026

Department 1

Spanish

Abstract

Tatiana Huezo's debut film El Lugar Mas Pequeno (The Tiniest Place, 2011) is a documentary about the filmmaker's journey to her grandmother's village, Cinquera, in El Salvador. During the country's civil war (1980-1992), the right-wing national government destroyed Cinquera, a stronghold of the leftist resistance, erasing the village from the country's official maps. As an evocative contemplation of a tiny community once destroyed but now thriving into the twenty-first century, The Tiniest Place explores to what extent - and in which ways - cinema can register the painful legacies of political violence. Lacayo argues that The Tiniest Place enacts an ecological reclaiming of Cinquera's history and place. This reclaiming of a "new" Cinquera allows the citizens to carry on with their lives, persevering as a community of survivors not despite their shared trauma but because of it, united in the deep pain of losing their loved ones in the war.

ISBN/ISSN

979-8881903732

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