
Periodicals in Latin America
Interdisciplinary Approaches to Serialized Print Culture
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Periodicals in Latin America
Interdisciplinary Approaches to Serialized Print Culture
About this book
Exploring how Latin American print culture has informed global exchange
The first volume in English to focus on Latin American serialized print culture, Periodicals in Latin America assembles research on a diverse range of publications, including avant-garde reviews, comics, specialized journals, mass-market magazines, and political periodicals, from the late nineteenth century to the present day.
In this book, scholars from a variety of disciplines examine both celebrated and little-known periodicals to demonstrate how publications supported emerging movements such as Indigenismo and feminism; undermined hegemonic conceptions of statehood and national identity; and questioned ideas about the relationship between the visual, literary, and political. Bringing Latin American print culture together with research and theories from the largely Anglophone field of periodical studies, this volume contests readings that discount the region’s periodicals, situating Latin America as a contributor to—not just a recipient of—global exchanges. Contributors also challenge the idea that periodicals are only useful for the insights they can offer into history, championing close attention to their material and materiality.
The writers in this book reflect on the unique qualities and divergences of the region’s periodicals from those of other parts of the world and the need for different approaches to studying them. The volume bridges and brings into dialogue new research on print serials and their readers in the Spanish-, Portuguese-, and English-speaking worlds.
Contributors: Joanna Crow | María del Pilar Blanco | José Chávarry | Jorge Catalá | Isabella Cosse | M. Paula Bontempo | Sandra Szir | Camilla Sutherland | Luis Rebaza-Soraluz | Claire Lindsay | Valentino Gianuzzi | Sofía Mercader | Rielle Navitski | Luz Ainaí Morales Pino | Maria Chiara D’Argenio
A volume in the series Reframing Media, Technology, and Culture in Latin/o America, edited by Héctor Fernández L’Hoeste and Juan Carlos RodríguezFrequently asked questions
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Introduction
- 1. Citizenship in Peruvian Illustrated Magazines
- 2. Caras y Caretas and the Social and Technological Origins of Mass Imaging in Early Twentieth-Century Argentina
- 3. Dimly Enlightening: Constructing Modern Bourgeois Visualization in Fin-de-Siècle Uruguayan and Argentinian Caras y Caretas
- 4. El Cojo Ilustrado (1892–1915): Word, Image, and Competing Visualities of Race and Gender in Venezuela’s Turn of the Century
- 5. Queer Lines, Queer Time: Aubrey Beardsley, Julio Ruelas, and Roberto Montenegro in Modernista Magazines
- 6. “Where Will the Brazilian Los Angeles Be?”: Cinema, the Illustrated Press, and Visions of Local Modernity in Early Twentieth-Century Brazil
- 7. The Printed Spaces of Peruvian Indigenismo: Woodcuts, Indigeneity, and the Visual Rhetoric of the Andean Avant-Garde
- 8. Made in Circulation: Race Talk and Repertorio Americano in the 1920s
- 9. Modernity and Afro-Cuban Representation in Illustrated Magazines in Cuba (1915–1940)
- 10. Cosmopolitanism as Feminist Praxis: Victoria Ocampo’s Revista SUR
- 11. The Peruvian Revolution through Textual (1971–1975)
- 12. Noticias and the Politics of the Everyday and Childhood in 1970s Argentina
- 13. From the New Feminist Wave to Gender Studies: Feminist Periodicals in Argentina and Mexico (1976–2009)
- List of Contributors
- Index