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Mexican Melodrama Film And Nation From The Golden Age To The New Wave Illustrated Elena Lahrvivaz

  • SKU: BELL-36513852
Mexican Melodrama Film And Nation From The Golden Age To The New Wave Illustrated Elena Lahrvivaz
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Mexican Melodrama Film And Nation From The Golden Age To The New Wave Illustrated Elena Lahrvivaz instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Arizona Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.65 MB
Pages: 232
Author: Elena Lahr-Vivaz
ISBN: 9780816532513, 0816532516
Language: English
Year: 2016
Edition: Illustrated

Product desciption

Mexican Melodrama Film And Nation From The Golden Age To The New Wave Illustrated Elena Lahrvivaz by Elena Lahr-vivaz 9780816532513, 0816532516 instant download after payment.

In Mexican Melodrama, Elena Lahr-Vivaz explores the compelling ways that new-wave Mexican directors use the tropes and themes of Golden Age films to denounce the excesses of a nation characterized as a fragmented and fictitious construct. Analyzing big hits and quiet successes of both Golden Age and new-wave cinema, the author offers in each chapter a comparative reading of films from the two eras, considering, for instance, Amores perros (Love’s a Bitch, Alejandro González Iñárritu, 2000) alongside Nosotros los pobres (We the Poor, Ismael Rodríguez, 1947). Through such readings, Lahr-Vivaz examines how new-wave directors draw from a previous generation to produce meaning in the present.
Mexico’s Golden Age of film—the period from the 1930s to the 1950s—is considered “golden” due to both the prestige of the era’s stars and the critical and popular success of the films released. Golden Age directors often turned to the tropes of melodrama and allegory to offer spectators an image of an idealized Mexico and to spur the formation of a spectatorship united through shared tears and laughter. In contrast, Lahr-Vivaz demonstrates that new-wave directors of the 1990s and 2000s use the melodramatic mode to present a vision of fragmentation and to open a space for critical resistance. In so doing, new-wave directors highlight the limitations rather than the possibilities of a unified spectatorship, and point to the need for spectators to assume a critical stance in the face of the exigencies of the present.
Written in an accessible style, Mexican Melodrama offers a timely comparative analysis of critically acclaimed films that will serve as key referents in discussions of Mexican cinema for years to come.

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