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[ecrea] Spanish & Latin American Cinemas 15.2 journal published
Thu Jul 19 18:32:09 GMT 2018
Intellect is happy to announce that /Studies in Spanish & Latin American
Cinemas
<https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Journal,id=125/view,page=0/>/15.2
is now available. For more information about /SLAC/ 15.2 including how
to subscribe, please click here
<https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=26498/>or
email (tessa /at/ intellectbooks.com) <mailto:(tessa /at/ intellectbooks.com)>
Articles within this issue include (partial list):
_Central American cinematographic aesthetics and their role in
international film festivals_
Authors: Andrea Cabezas Vargas And Júlia González de Canales Carcereny
Page Start: 163
Arturo Menéndez’s award-winning Malacrianza/The Crow’s Nest (2014)
chronicles the tribulations of Don Cleo, a poor piñata salesman
suffering from mental and physical ailments. Cleo’s life is turned
upside down when he receives an extortion letter asking for US$500 in
exchange for his life. This article examines Malacrianza’s linkage
between the protagonist’s body and his ailments and the broader
sociopolitical matrix. I argue that the symptoms he demonstrates are
manifestations of the impact of civil war and urban violence upon the
social telos of Central America. My study explores phenomenological film
analysis as a tool for examining affects and their circulations in the
film. By using an affective code, Malacrianza engages the viewer in an
intimate experience of the violence(s) of contemporary El Salvador.
_Symptoms of a civil war: Affect, disease and urban violence in Arturo
Menéndez’s Malacrianza/The Crow’s Nest (2014)_
Authors: María del Carmen Caña Jiménez
Page Start: 217
This article provides a brief aesthetic history of Central American
cinema, outlining the impact of limited resources, sociopolitical
conflicts and global aesthetic trends on regional film production.
Focusing on films produced in the late 1990s and the early 2000s, it
analyses how contemporary Central American films have overcome economic
and material limitations and generated films that obtained acclaim in
regional and international circuits. It also analyses the impact of
international film festivals on Central American film production,
focusing on the work of the Central American, yet also transnational,
directors Julio Hernández Cordón and Tatiana Huezo.
_Performing for Hollywood: Coloniality and the tourist image in Esteban
Ramírez’s Caribe/Caribbean (2004)_
Authors: Liz Harvey-Kattou
Page Start: 249
This article problematizes US–Costa Rican cultural and ideological
relations through an analysis of Esteban Ramírez’s Caribe/Caribbean
(2004) by arguing that it unconsciously invites an international
audience to colonize Costa Rica – and Latin America more widely – via
the tourist gaze. Beginning by considering Ramírez’s anti-imperialist
stance within the film’s plot, which underscores the sovereignty of the
Central American nation, I argue that these aims are undone through the
exoticization of space and place. The article analyses how the tropical
image of the nation is internalized by the film and how hegemonic
Hollywood tropes of ethnicity and gender are mimicked and performed.
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