This article compares two Latin American feminist short documentaries that challenge mainstream representations of women by making use of ironic montage to dismantle gender essentialism. In Woman's World (María Luisa Bemberg, Argentina, 1972) and Miss Universe in Peru (Chaski Group, Perú, 1982), the capitalist/patriarchal mandate is contested in the editing room through rhetorical devices that, although similar, also bear remarkable differences, such as the use, for storytelling, of two different types of irony: dramatic and situational. Moreover, to introduce these films to a potentially lay audience in feminist and/or Latin American nonfiction cinema, we interrogate the complex production modes of feminist films, focusing on how they resp...
Millán argues that Mexican women's cinema of the eighties is similar to the rest of Latin-American c...
This article attempts to create a cross-cultural dialogue between Cuban cinema and certain aspects o...
This special section within the issues 61 of Jump Cut: A Review of Contemporary Media was co-edited ...
This article compares two Latin American feminist short documentaries that challenge mainstream repr...
This article contextualises and characterises the history and film production of the Colombian femin...
This article contextualises and characterises the history and film production of the Colombian femin...
From the 1970s, Latin American women began making documentary films with clear political intents. Th...
Reading through one another insights raised by Teresa de Lauretis (1987; 1990), Donna Haraway (1988;...
This exploration of the relation between women’s cinema and Latin American cinemas, begins by interr...
Orientador: Luzia Margareth RagoTese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de F...
This thesis brings together feminist documentary film theory and feminist new materialism(s) to desc...
Following recent endeavours that have unearthed women’s cinema and reclaimed its contribution to fil...
Historically, societies have been predominately patriarchal; the Americas are no exception. Patriarc...
Millán argues that Mexican women's cinema of the eighties is similar to the rest of Latin-Ame...
The Ukamau group has a long history that spans more than sixty years. The oral accounts acknowledge ...
Millán argues that Mexican women's cinema of the eighties is similar to the rest of Latin-American c...
This article attempts to create a cross-cultural dialogue between Cuban cinema and certain aspects o...
This special section within the issues 61 of Jump Cut: A Review of Contemporary Media was co-edited ...
This article compares two Latin American feminist short documentaries that challenge mainstream repr...
This article contextualises and characterises the history and film production of the Colombian femin...
This article contextualises and characterises the history and film production of the Colombian femin...
From the 1970s, Latin American women began making documentary films with clear political intents. Th...
Reading through one another insights raised by Teresa de Lauretis (1987; 1990), Donna Haraway (1988;...
This exploration of the relation between women’s cinema and Latin American cinemas, begins by interr...
Orientador: Luzia Margareth RagoTese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de F...
This thesis brings together feminist documentary film theory and feminist new materialism(s) to desc...
Following recent endeavours that have unearthed women’s cinema and reclaimed its contribution to fil...
Historically, societies have been predominately patriarchal; the Americas are no exception. Patriarc...
Millán argues that Mexican women's cinema of the eighties is similar to the rest of Latin-Ame...
The Ukamau group has a long history that spans more than sixty years. The oral accounts acknowledge ...
Millán argues that Mexican women's cinema of the eighties is similar to the rest of Latin-American c...
This article attempts to create a cross-cultural dialogue between Cuban cinema and certain aspects o...
This special section within the issues 61 of Jump Cut: A Review of Contemporary Media was co-edited ...