Under the Myth: Truth, Narrative, and the Fate of Historical Reality
Introduction Carlos Alsina opened his radio monologue on May 26, 2026, by invoking the Battle of the Alamo. The episode quickly moved from historical summary to cultural memory: William Barret Travis, the siege in Texas, the famous letter in which he declared he would “never surrender,” and the later transformation of that episode into a foundational American myth. Between documented events and cinematic reconstruction, the Alamo has long oscillated between history and legend. Within that narrative space appears a striking remark attributed to Paco Ignacio Taibo II: “debajo de una gran mentira se esconden verdades tapadas” (“beneath a great lie, hidden truths remain”). The sentence carries immediate force. It suggests depth beneath surface, authenticity beneath distortion, something concealed by official accounts waiting to be recovered. Yet this intuitive appeal raises a more difficult question: what does it actually mean for truth to lie “beneath” a narrative? The archaeologic...