Article
From the nineties the author has been devoting herself to an analysis of political repression during the Argentine dictatorship, a time which was marked by state brutality and by the disappearances of many of the system’s critics. In her novel ´El fin de la historia´, which appeared in 1996, she succeeded in conveying a complex critical confrontation with the Argentina of the seventies in which expression is given to the numerous opinions and attitudes. "How to describe this betrayal, how to describe a torturer and his own view of the truth and with what other truths should one confront him? I have tried to blur the border between documentation and fiction. Above all, my text is meant to be fact as literature with all the problematic and ambiguous implications which such an attempt entails."
With ´Las hermanas de Shakespeare´ (1999), she presents a collection of partly already published essays, in which she throws a critical light on the situation of women authors. The great challenge to women writers lies for Heker in a critical look by the woman writer at herself and her sex. "If a woman is capable of looking deeply into herself she will be able to recognize men and to put herself in the position of others, as, for example, Katherine Mansfield was able to do. A woman writer who accepts her own maliciousness, her contradictions and her particular relationship to her body will be able to establish contact with herself, other women and men."
Liliana lives and works today in Buenos Aires.


