Read more
This pioneering book explores new configurations of Día de Muertos during COVID-19 within considerations of how the pandemic has shaped ideas about death and dying differently. It investigates how commemorative and mourning practices changed in Mexico during the turbulent years of 2020 21 and, through its innovative case studies of Mexican communities in Ireland and the UK, asks how the festival contributed in all three regions to global conversations about grief, mental health, and gender-based violence. We offer original analysis of Día de Muertos expressions including marches, dance performances, masks, film, and calavera poetry, alongside online and digital community and home-based creative gestures. Our analysis reveals how Mexicans and Mexicans abroad have engaged with the rich compendium of Día de Muertos symbolic and narrative systems in order to discuss how COVID-19 has re-framed ideas of loss and renewal more widely.
List of contents
Chapter 1: Día de Muertos during the COVID-19 Pandemic.- Chapter 2: Commemorative Shifts and Transformations to Día de Muertos in Mexico in 2020-21.- Chapter 3: Contagious Feminist Interventions and Cultural Politics: Marcha de las Catrinas, Día de Muertas, and Calaveritas Pandémicas 2020-21.- Chapter 4: Creative and Digital Placemaking: Home and Community Responses to Día de Muertos in the UK and Ireland (2020).- Chapter 5: Constructing Spaces of Renewal: Community Responses to Día de Muertos in the UK and Ireland (2021).- Chapter 6: Calaveras Pandémicas: A Decolonial Archive of Pandemic Poetry.- Chapter 7: PostScript: Día de Muertos 2022 and Beyond.
About the author
Jane E. Lavery is Associate Professor in Latin American Studies, University of Southampton, UK. She works on contemporary Mexican and Latin American visual, cultural and literary studies with a focus on gender, the Día de Muertos, multimedia production and digital humanities.
Nuala Finnegan is Professor in Spanish and Latin American Studies, University College Cork, Ireland. She researches contemporary Mexican literary and visual studies with a particular concentration on gender, gender-based violence and cultural production.
Summary
This pioneering book explores new configurations of Día de Muertos during COVID-19 within considerations of how the pandemic has shaped ideas about death and dying differently. It investigates how commemorative and mourning practices changed in Mexico during the turbulent years of 2020–21 and, through its innovative case studies of Mexican communities in Ireland and the UK, asks how the festival contributed in all three regions to global conversations about grief, mental health, and gender-based violence. We offer original analysis of Día de Muertos expressions including marches, dance performances, masks, film, and calavera poetry, alongside online and digital community and home-based creative gestures. Our analysis reveals how Mexicans and Mexicans abroad have engaged with the rich compendium of Día de Muertos symbolic and narrative systems in order to discuss how COVID-19 has re-framed ideas of loss and renewal more widely.