Constructing the Image of the Mexican Revolution Constructing the Image of the Mexican Revolution

Constructing the Image of the Mexican Revolution

Cinema and the Archive

    • USD 24.99
    • USD 24.99

Descripción editorial

With a cast ranging from Pancho Villa to Dolores del Río and Tina Modotti, Constructing the Image of the Mexican Revolution demonstrates the crucial role played by Mexican and foreign visual artists in revolutionizing Mexico’s twentieth-century national iconography. Investigating the convergence of cinema, photography, painting, and other graphic arts in this process, Zuzana Pick illuminates how the Mexican Revolution’s timeline (1910–1917) corresponds with the emergence of media culture and modernity. Drawing on twelve foundational films from Que Viva Mexico! (1931–1932) to And Starring Pancho Villa as Himself (2003), Pick proposes that cinematic images reflect the image repertoire produced during the revolution, often playing on existing nationalist themes or on folkloric motifs designed for export. Ultimately illustrating the ways in which modernism reinvented existing signifiers of national identity, Constructing the Image of the Mexican Revolution unites historicity, aesthetics, and narrative to enrich our understanding of Mexicanidad.

GÉNERO
Arte y espectáculo
PUBLICADO
2010
1 de enero
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
265
Páginas
EDITORIAL
University of Texas Press
VENDEDOR
University of Texas at Austin
TAMAÑO
5.8
MB

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