Abstract
Throughout the second decade of this century a relevant migrational literature written by Latin American women in Europe has been published, particularly in Spain. This literature depictes the migrational experience of the female writers who, once deterritorialized in the Old Continent, testify about their precariousness and vulnerabilities as subordinated. At the same time ultra parties have emerged all over Europe to blame migrants for all the disasters of their countries so the testimonial corpus may now be re-signified as a response for the dogmas spread by political discourses. The present article, therefore, analyzes from interdisciplinarity the particularities of the current migrational literature written in Europe to highlight how the testimony of the displaced women presents a didactic reading against the xenophobic discourses promulgated by political narratives.
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