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[Commlist] New Book: Women in Iberian Filmic Culture
Fri Jun 26 16:37:02 GMT 2020
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Women in Iberian Cinema
Intellect is pleased to announce that /*Women in Iberian Filmic Culture
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/women-in-iberian-filmic-cultures>*/,
edited by Elena Cordero-Hoyo and Begoña Soto-Vázquez, is now available
in ebook, paperback and hardback.
Though cinema arrived in Spain and Portugal at the end of the nineteenth
century, national and industrial problems as well as the dictatorships
of Salazar and Caetano (in Portugal) and Franco (in Spain) meant Iberian
cinemas were isolated from European cultural trends. Strict censorship
in both countries limited the themes and artistic practices adopted,
while a specific cinematographic language, in many cases full of
metaphors and symbolism, sought alternatives to the imposed official
discourse and preconceived definitions of supposed national identities.
By contrast, the arrival of democracy from the 1970s onwards widened not
just the panorama of film production and criticism, but also opened the
film industry to women’s participation in areas historically assigned to
men.
Focusing on Portuguese and Spanish cinema, this collection brings
together research about women and their status in relation to Iberian
filmic culture. The volume contributes to ongoing debates about the
position of women in the cinemas of Portugal and Spain from
interdisciplinary and feminist perspectives as well as new accounts of
film history. It also aims to promote comparisons between Iberian
cinemas and visual culture, a topic that is almost unexplored in
academia, despite the similar histories of the two countries,
particularly throughout the twentieth century.
*_
_*
*_Table of Contents
_*
*Introduction:* Women in Iberian cinemas, a singular tour in Spain and
Portugal – /Elena Cordero-Hoyo and Begoña Soto-Vázquez/
*Part 1: The presence of women in Iberian cinemas*
- Fiction as a Place of Power: The Presence of Female Directors
Throughout the History of Portuguese Cinema – /Ana Catarina Pereira/
- The Invisible Women of Spanish Cinema – /Annette Scholz/
- Três dias sem Deus by Bárbara Virgínia, a Different Way of
Representation – /Ricardo Vieira Lisboa/
/
/*Part 2: Killing the muse: Women as creator*
- Gender Violence and Historical Memory in Margarida Cardoso and Isabel
Coixet – /Estela Vieira/
- ‘People Don’t Understand [the] World’: The Limits of Transnational
Authorship in the Cinema of Isabel Coixet – /Katarzyna Paszkiewicz/
- Murmuring Colonial Ghosts in Margarida Cardoso’s Filmography –
/Adriana Martins/
*Part 3: Beyond the author: Recognizing other cinematographic professions*
- Weaving a Cinematographic Culture and Writing about Film or How to
Reconstruct the Subject of Women in Spanish Silent Cinema – /Begoña
Soto-Vázquez/
- A Woman Censor during the Portuguese Dictatorship (1968–74) – /Ana
Bela Morais/
- Costume Designers in Portugal: A Trade Between Art and Technique
Relegated to the Status of ‘a Woman’s Thing’ – /Caterina Cucinotta/
*
*
*Part 4: Historical memory and the gendered archive*
- Paradigms – Women Filmmakers in 1970s Revolutionary Portugal –
Delgado, Nordlund, Cordeiro and Serra – /Érica Faleiro Rodrigues/
- The Mother Awaits: Woman and Landscape in Galician Non-Fiction Cinema
– /Mª Soliña Barreiro González/
- Exploring the Portuguese Memory through Appropriation Film: A toca do
lobo (Mourão, 2015) – /Elena Cordero-Hoyo/
*Notes on contributors**
*
Please visit our website for more information:
https://www.intellectbooks.com/women-in-iberian-filmic-cultures
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