Indigeneity in Latin American Cinema

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A01=Milton Fernando Gonzalez Rodriguez
archetypes
audience
Author_Milton Fernando Gonzalez Rodriguez
axis
catalysis
Category=ATFA
Category=ATFN
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exotification
global viewers
histrionic indigeneity
humanities
indigenous characters
Indigenous cinema
indigenous communities
international festivals
lexis
metropolis
mimesis
social sciences
society
stereotypes
twenty-first century
visual narratives

Product details

  • ISBN 9781501384707
  • Weight: 620g
  • Dimensions: 232 x 154mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Aug 2022
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Indigeneity in Latin American Cinema explores how contemporary films (2000-2020) participate in the evolution and circulation of images and sounds that in many ways define how indigenous communities are imagined, at a local, regional and global scale. The volume reviews the diversity of portrayals from a chronological, geopolitical, linguistic, epistemic-ontological, transnational and intersectional, paradigm-changing and self-representational perspective, allocating one chapter to each theme. The corpus of this study consists of 68 fictional features directed by non-indigenous filmmakers, 31 cinematic works produced by indigenous directors/communities, and 22 Cine Regional (Regional Cinema) films. The book also draws upon a significant number of engravings, drawings, paintings, photographs and films, produced between 1493 and 2000, as primary sources for the historical review of the visual representations of indigeneity. Through content and close (textual) analysis, interviews with audiences, surveys and social media posts analysis, the author looks at the contexts in which Latin American films circulate in international festivals and the paradigm shifts introduced by self-representational cinema and Roma (Mexico, 2018). Conclusively, the author provides the foundations of histrionic indigeneity, a theory that explains how overtly histrionic proclivities play a significant role in depictions of an imagined indigenous Other in recent films.

Milton Fernando Gonzalez Rodriguez is a Marie Sklodowska Curie Fellow at the Faculty of Arts, KU Leuven, Belgium, and author of Ontologies and Natures: Knowledge about Health in Visual Culture (2022). The focus of his research lies on the historical evolution, circulation and materialization of representations, artefacts and ideas from a visual, linguistic and epistemic perspective. His previous and current affiliations include the University of Iceland and University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

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