The transnational media practice of Mexican fronterizo empresarios Félix Padilla (1862 -1937) and Edmundo Padilla (1903-1984) of the El Paso-Juárez border region is my case study for unpacking practices of retrieving the past that compete, and often intersect, under the banners conventionally called “history” and “heritage.” This case study also allows us to explore the concepts of the border , the borderless, and the in between broadly construed. The Padilla Collection of audio - visual artifacts presents a unique case and challenge for film preservation since it defies the category of a single nation and unique origins. The Padillas based in El Paso, Texas (USA) and Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua (Mexico) were traveling showmen who exhibited an...
In the south and north of México, the border regions are a stage of complex processes in migration, ...
Over the last several decades, the boundaries of languages and national and ethnic identities have b...
<p>My dissertation, <“>Transcending Borders: The Transnational Construction of Mexicanness, 19...
This essay offers a brief overview of my filmmaking work over the last 30 years,\ud during which I h...
A very large number of films have been and continue to be made about the border by both the United S...
The declining sovereignty of nation-states intensifies the symbolic functions performed by physical ...
This paper uses films to discuss the social conditions, discrimination and violence against the wome...
In 1961, Mexican President Adolfo López Mateos launched a program that at- tempted to reinvigorate a...
My project argues that the U.S.-Mexico border is an assemblage of medial forms that are communicated...
The purpose of this study is to explore the interconnectedness between the history and cultural memo...
Sharing the interdisciplinary perspective on cultural hybridization on the U.S./Mexico border as evi...
The U.S.-Mexican border towns are often defined as both multicultural and relatively young trans...
The following was the author's presidential address at the annual meeting of the Pacific Coast Branc...
Through the many changes in American cultural history, from the notion of the melting pot to the cu...
This article rethinks the concept of border through a spatial and phenomenological ethnographic film...
In the south and north of México, the border regions are a stage of complex processes in migration, ...
Over the last several decades, the boundaries of languages and national and ethnic identities have b...
<p>My dissertation, <“>Transcending Borders: The Transnational Construction of Mexicanness, 19...
This essay offers a brief overview of my filmmaking work over the last 30 years,\ud during which I h...
A very large number of films have been and continue to be made about the border by both the United S...
The declining sovereignty of nation-states intensifies the symbolic functions performed by physical ...
This paper uses films to discuss the social conditions, discrimination and violence against the wome...
In 1961, Mexican President Adolfo López Mateos launched a program that at- tempted to reinvigorate a...
My project argues that the U.S.-Mexico border is an assemblage of medial forms that are communicated...
The purpose of this study is to explore the interconnectedness between the history and cultural memo...
Sharing the interdisciplinary perspective on cultural hybridization on the U.S./Mexico border as evi...
The U.S.-Mexican border towns are often defined as both multicultural and relatively young trans...
The following was the author's presidential address at the annual meeting of the Pacific Coast Branc...
Through the many changes in American cultural history, from the notion of the melting pot to the cu...
This article rethinks the concept of border through a spatial and phenomenological ethnographic film...
In the south and north of México, the border regions are a stage of complex processes in migration, ...
Over the last several decades, the boundaries of languages and national and ethnic identities have b...
<p>My dissertation, <“>Transcending Borders: The Transnational Construction of Mexicanness, 19...