This essay analyzes the 2019 Guatemalan film La Llorona, directed by Jayro Bustamante, in order to question the representational and affective function of monstrosity in genre cinema, asking, in particular, how it recruits Indigenous epistemology to reorient bodies away from colonial logic. As opposed to classic north American horror films, which often link non-Western spiritual practices to the unleashing of evil forces, La Llorona revises the genre by locating that evil in the character representing the genocidal authoritarian state, the vanquishing of which requires the use of an Indigenous spiritual practice that involves bodily possession. I argue that the film shifts the objectifying gaze from the Indigenous as Other to the white patr...
To live under the conditions of settler-colonialism as an Indigenous person is to exist under a terr...
textIn Mexico there is an increasing lack of engagement of the Mexican government and its citizens t...
What did Guatemala do to deserve so much suffering? This question, like those so often posed to the ...
This paper will document how La Llorona is depicted in horror movies particularly in the 2007 film T...
The online exposition “La habitación del desahogo/The Room of Relief” reinvents the legendary Mexica...
My dissertation addresses the images of La Llorona in the poetry and fiction of Chicana writers and ...
The scholarship on Latin American film in 2020 points to a diverse and vibrant field of study that e...
In this article, I analyze two short documentaries Kat at Kat’ex? (2017) and Sepur Zarco: la vida de...
This article uses Lacanian psychoanalysis to look past the enormous contextual differences between t...
Maya Kaqchikel women theater groups in Guatemala emerged in the 2000s in collaboration with Mestiza/...
The following article aims to develop a Hispanic intercultural cinematic study of the film “The Milk...
International audienceLa llorona is a film that is part of the wide artistic and literary production...
This article explores, describes and analyses the material, linguistic and cultural framework in whi...
Despite winning several international awards and being praised by the critics, the Peruvian film La ...
The past is certain, the future an illusion. Contemporary films such as Ivy Maraey: land without evi...
To live under the conditions of settler-colonialism as an Indigenous person is to exist under a terr...
textIn Mexico there is an increasing lack of engagement of the Mexican government and its citizens t...
What did Guatemala do to deserve so much suffering? This question, like those so often posed to the ...
This paper will document how La Llorona is depicted in horror movies particularly in the 2007 film T...
The online exposition “La habitación del desahogo/The Room of Relief” reinvents the legendary Mexica...
My dissertation addresses the images of La Llorona in the poetry and fiction of Chicana writers and ...
The scholarship on Latin American film in 2020 points to a diverse and vibrant field of study that e...
In this article, I analyze two short documentaries Kat at Kat’ex? (2017) and Sepur Zarco: la vida de...
This article uses Lacanian psychoanalysis to look past the enormous contextual differences between t...
Maya Kaqchikel women theater groups in Guatemala emerged in the 2000s in collaboration with Mestiza/...
The following article aims to develop a Hispanic intercultural cinematic study of the film “The Milk...
International audienceLa llorona is a film that is part of the wide artistic and literary production...
This article explores, describes and analyses the material, linguistic and cultural framework in whi...
Despite winning several international awards and being praised by the critics, the Peruvian film La ...
The past is certain, the future an illusion. Contemporary films such as Ivy Maraey: land without evi...
To live under the conditions of settler-colonialism as an Indigenous person is to exist under a terr...
textIn Mexico there is an increasing lack of engagement of the Mexican government and its citizens t...
What did Guatemala do to deserve so much suffering? This question, like those so often posed to the ...