Jacqueline Urla

2025-2026

Francois Chevalier

University of Massachusetts Amherst

“Searching for Amadeo: an intimate ethnography of the historical memory movement of Navarra”

Jacqueline Urla received her doctorate in cultural anthropology from the University of California, Berkeley.  Her research has ranged broadly on cultural politics, the ethnography of resistance, nationalism and language ideology in the Basque Country, as well as gender and visual anthropology.  She is a recipient of grants from the National Endowment of the Humanities, Social Science Research Council, The Getty Foundation, the National Science Foundation, and the Program for Cultural Cooperation between Spain’s Ministry of Culture and U.S. Universities.  She has served as member of the faculty of the University of Massachusetts Amherst since 1990, as well as Director of the Modern European Studies Program and coordinator of the William A. Douglass Chair in Basque Cultural Studies financed by the Etxepare Institute.  In 2021 she was named Dean of the Graduate School. 

Projet de recherche

The proposed project entitled: “Searching for Amadeo: an intimate ethnography of the historical memory movement of Navarra” follows the author, an American anthropologist and daughter of an exiled republican family, on her journey to join the historical memory movement in Pamplona, Navarra, to discover the circumstances of her grandfather’s death in the massacre of Valcaldera on August 23,1936, and his subsequent transfer to the Valley of the Fallen. Searching for Amadeo shines a light on what the author calls, the ‘traffic in bodies’ as an important modality of Spain’s necropolitics.  Bridging the humanities and social sciences, this project proposes the experimental format of intimate ethnography as an especially fruitful and revelatory method for understanding the multilayered subjective experience of memory work and the afterlife of violence on what Marianne Hirsch has called the “post memory” generation. 

Sélection de publications

2025    “Año de la Victoria,” In, Mabel Tapia (curator), Bosques de la Memoria/Memoriaren Basoak. San Sebastián. Museo San Telmo, pp.106-118.  [Exhibition catalogue]. 
2024    “Critique”. (with Highet, K., S. Makoni, B. Urciuoli).  In, A. Del Percio and M. Flubacher, (eds.), Critical Sociolinguistics: Dialogues, Dissonances, Developments.. London, Bloomsbury, pp, 377-400.
2022    Women Bertsolaris in a Time of Nuances: Bodies, Voices and the Art of Improvisation. An Interview with Maialen Lujanbio and Miren Artetxe. (with R. Lázaro), In, Bertso Eskolak: Basque Improvisational Poetry Schools. L Ariznabarreta, I. Arrieta Barro, and X. Irujo (eds.),  Reno, Nevada, Center for Basque Studies Press, pp.  187-206.
2022    “Introduction. Activating New Speakers: Research among Spain’s Historic Linguistic Minorities” (with Fernando Ramallo). Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, vol. 43, no. 1, pp 1-7.
2021    “Una crítica generativa de la gubernamentalidad lingüística”, Anuario de Glotopolítica. No. 4. glotopolitica.com/aglo-4/
2019    Prólogo. In, Bingen Amadoz. Matones.  Pamplona (Spain): Pamiela.
 

 

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