Description
Examines the representation and function of islands and archipelagos in Latin American cinema.
About the Author
Antonio Gomez is Associate Professor of Latin American Literature and Film at Tulane University, USA. Francisco-J. Hernandez Adrian is Associate Professor of Hispanic Studies in the School of Modern Languages and Cultures at Durham University, UK.
Reviews
From Cuba to Rapa Nui/Easter Island, from 1930s Hollywood Mr. Moto murder-mysteries to contemporary Patricio Guzman documentaries, The Film Archipelago draws on the uniqueness of islands (their distinctive memories, their liminality, relationality, imaginary) to provide a timely perspective on our tumultuous world from the Global South. This standout book is a truly engaging, wonderfully varied, and deeply insightful contribution to Film Studies (as it turns increasingly away from the nation towards the wider world), which will also resonate strongly across Latin American and Island Studies. A captivating read! -- David Martin-Jones, University of Glasgow, UK
Focusing on island spaces and territories from Martin Garcia to the Antilles, the essays collected here brilliantly investigate their cinematic representation, meanings and how their study further questions the critical paradigm of national cinemas. A major contribution to Latin American film studies and studies of space in film. -- Deborah Martin, University College London, UK
This well-curated and insightfully organized volume invites us to reconceptualize Latin America and the Caribbean from an innovative, rigorous, and unexplored perspective: cinematic islandscapes. Essential reading for anyone seeking breadth and depth in Latin American and Caribbean film. -- Veronica Garibotto, The University of Kansas, USA
Book Information
ISBN 9781350281752
Author Antonio Gomez
Format Paperback
Page Count 360
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Series World Cinema