González de Oleaga, Marisa N.2024-05-202024-05-2020189781845199227https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14468/15601The West has an abundant literature on the subject of utopias. These exercises have traditionally concentrated on what was called “utopian thought” and “literary utopias”, a genre of writing with its own conventions and rules. Actual cases of utopias that were set up at some point in contemporary history seem to have generated less interest, possibly because the very definition of utopia — as a “no-place” or an “idealplace” — appears to preclude any project carried to completion, which, for that very reason, would cease to be utopian. How to do things with utopias is a proposal that is developed at length in En primera persona: Testimonios desde la utopía,2 an analysis of the limitations that the literary genre imposed on the representation and circulation of the memory of utopian/dystopian experiments, and which calls for new forms of writing and representation.enAtribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 4.0 InternacionalHow to do things with utopias? Stories, Memory and Resistance in Paraguaycapítulo de libro