其他摘要:Enforced disappearance in Colombia has recorded a type of violence capable of attacking not only life but existence as well. Establishing a logic of fantastic terror, the position of victims drops into a void of meaning that breaks what can be felt or said. However, a phenomenological-hermeneutical approach to the experience of eleven relatives of people disappeared in Colombia casts doubt on the total desire for violence and reveals that the introduction of the non-place does not withhold the relationship with those who are absent. Rather, our results suggest that the missing person may resound, manifest in dreams, or become the fabric for the act of weaving. It is in these spaces of appearance where activism against their absence is articulated.