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Ghosts of the Revolution in Mexican Literature and Visual Culture - Revisitations in Modern and Contemporary Creative Media

English · Paperback / Softback

Description

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The official centenary commemorating the Mexican Revolution of 1910 provided scholars with an opportunity to consider memorialization and its legacies and 'afterimages' in the twentieth century through to the present time. This collection of new essays, commissioned from experts based in Mexico, Europe and the United States, plays on the interrelated notions of 'revisitation', haunting, residual traces and valediction to interrogate the Revolution's multiple appearances, reckonings and reconfigurations in art, photography, film, narrative fiction, periodicals, travel-testimonies and poetry, examining key constituencies of creative media in Mexico that have been involved in historicizing, contesting or evading the mixed legacies of the Revolution. The interplay of themes, practices and contexts across the chapters (ranging from the 1920s through to the present day) draws on interdisciplinary thinking as well as new findings, framing the volume's discourse with a deliberately multi-dimensional approach to an often homogenized topic. The contributors' scholarly referencing of artists, novelists, poets, photographers, foreign correspondents, critics, filmmakers and curators is detailed and wide-ranging, creating new juxtapositions that include some rarely studied material.

List of contents

Contents: 'The Dead Letter' by Simon Carnell - Erica Segre: Introduction: Cultural Memories of an Unquiet Past: Charting Ghosts of the Mexican Revolution in Mexican Literature, Film, Art and Photography - Paul-Henri Giraud: On Execution Walls, Bones, Horses and Tombs: Phantasmal Motifs and Funereal Tropes in Twentieth-Century Photography, Print and Painting in Mexico - David Craven: The Future That Was and Yet Might Be: The Mexican Revolution at 100 and its Afterimage in the Arts - Iván Pérez Daniel: Mirages of a Second Revolution: Mexican Writers and Socialist Realism (The Case of the Magazine Ruta, 1933-1935) - Christina Karageorgou-Bastea: Xavier Villaurrutia's Poetics of the Flesh: Experience, Promiscuity and the Introspective Revolution, 1930s-1940s - Simon Carnell: Through 'the Literary-Perception Scrambler'?: Lawrence, Huxley, Greene, Waugh and Lowry in Mexico between the Wars - Jesse Lerner: The Proletarian Camera: Héctor García and the Reconfiguring of the Mexican Stree - Steven Boldy: Fading Echoes of the Revolution in Carlos Fuentes's Cristóbal Nonato - Dolores Tierney: Residual Presences of the Revolution(ary Melodrama) in Mexico's Contemporary Transnational Filmmaking - Oriana Baddeley: Last Rites from Frida Kahlo to Teresa Margolles: Mexicanness and Visualizing the Politics of Victimhood.

About the author










Erica Segre is Lecturer in Latin American and Hispanic Studies and Fellow of Trinity College at the University of Cambridge. She specializes in nineteenth-century Latin American literature and thought and twentieth-century and contemporary visual culture. Her monograph Intersected Identities: Strategies of Visualization in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Mexican Culture was published in 2007.


Product details

Assisted by Erica Segre (Editor)
Publisher Peter Lang
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 31.12.2015
 
EAN 9783034307024
ISBN 978-3-0-3430702-4
No. of pages 316
Dimensions 150 mm x 19 mm x 225 mm
Weight 530 g
Series Iberian and Latin American Studies: The Arts, Literature, and Identity
Iberian and Latin American Studies: The Arts, Literature, and Identity
Subject Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > Romance linguistics / literary studies

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