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El. knyga: Talking #browntv: Latinas and Latinos on the Screen

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  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Dec-2019
  • Leidėjas: Ohio State University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780814277454
  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Dec-2019
  • Leidėjas: Ohio State University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780814277454

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Conversation on the representations of Latina/os in American TV and film in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.


Like two friends sitting down in front of the television together, in Talking #browntv, Frederick Luis Aldama and William Anthony Nericcio dialogue about the representations of Latina/os in American television and film from the twentieth century to the present day. One part conversation, one part critique, one part visual cultural studies, and one part rant against the culture industry profiting off warped caricatures of Latina/o subjectivities, Aldama and Nericcio analyze the ways in which Latinx performers have been mediated—with varying degrees of complexity—on the American screen. A comprehensive review of the history of Mexicans, Mexican Americans, Hispanics, Chicana/os, Latina/os, and Latinx performers in television and film, Talking #browntv boldly interrogates one of the largest paradoxes in the history of American television: Why are there so few Latina/os on television, and why, when they do appear, are they so often narcos, maids, strumpets, tarts, flakes, and losers?
 
From the subversive critiques embedded in well-loved children’s characters like Speedy Gonzalez to the perpetuation of racial stereotypes in modern-era pornography, from Eva Longoria as ethnic mannequin to J-Lo flipping the sexy Latina music video on its head in “I Luh Ya Papi,” and with more than 150 full-color images, Aldama and Nericcio seek to expose the underlying causes as to why Latina/os constitute only 2 percent of mainstream cultural production when they’re the majority minority in the US. In a moment when anti-Mexican and anti-immigrant rhetoric oozes from TV sets and medias platform, Talking #browntv emerges as a bold antidote, an eloquent rejoinder, and a thoughtful meditation on Latina/os on the American screen and in America today.
 
Introduction From Black and White to Shades of fflbrowntv 1(6)
Section I Toward a Theory of a Brown Televisual Imaginary
7(18)
Section II Pinche Paradoxes
25(27)
Section III Sombreros to Pistoleros
52(37)
Section IV From Ninos and Teens to Comidas
89(21)
Section V Fear, Loathing, and the Latinx Threat
110(22)
Coda The Brown Revolution Will Be Televised 132(25)
Notes 157(6)
Bibliography 163(12)
Index 175