Ebook Mexico on Main Street Transnational Film Culture in Los Angeles before World War II (Latinidad Transnational Cultures in the United States)

Ebook Mexico on Main Street Transnational Film Culture in Los Angeles before World War II (Latinidad Transnational Cultures in the United States)



Ebook Mexico on Main Street Transnational Film Culture in Los Angeles before World War II (Latinidad Transnational Cultures in the United States)

Ebook Mexico on Main Street Transnational Film Culture in Los Angeles before World War II (Latinidad Transnational Cultures in the United States)

You can download in the form of an ebook: pdf, kindle ebook, ms word here and more softfile type. Ebook Mexico on Main Street Transnational Film Culture in Los Angeles before World War II (Latinidad Transnational Cultures in the United States), this is a great books that I think are not only fun to read but also very educational.
Book Details :
Published on: 2015-04-01
Released on: 2015-03-04
Original language: English
Ebook Mexico on Main Street Transnational Film Culture in Los Angeles before World War II (Latinidad Transnational Cultures in the United States)

In the early decades of the twentieth-century, Main Street was the heart of Los Angeles’s Mexican immigrant community. It was also the hub for an extensive, largely forgotten film culture that thrived in L.A. during the early days of Hollywood. Drawing from rare archives, including the city’s Spanish-language newspapers, Colin Gunckel vividly demonstrates how this immigrant community pioneered a practice of transnational media convergence, consuming films from Hollywood and Mexico, while also producing fan publications, fiction, criticism, music, and live theatrical events.  Mexico on Main Street locates this film culture at the center of a series of key debates concerning national identity, ethnicity, class, and the role of Mexicans within Hollywood before World War II. As Gunckel shows, the immigrant community’s cultural elite tried to rally the working-class population toward the cause of Mexican nationalism, while Hollywood sought to position them as part of a lucrative transnational Latin American market. Yet ironically, both Hollywood studios and Mexican American cultural elites used the media to present negative depictions of working-class Mexicans, portraying their behaviors as a threat to middle-class respectability. Rather than simply depicting working-class immigrants as pawns of these power players, however, Gunckel reveals their active participation in the era’s film culture.   Gunckel’s innovative approach combines media studies, urban history, and ethnic studies to reconstruct a distinctive, richly layered immigrant film culture. Mexico on Main Street demonstrates how a site-specific study of cultural and ethnic issues challenges our existing conceptions of U.S. film history, Mexican cinema, and the history of Los Angeles.     Children Teens and Familie in the Movies UC... Children and Teens Videotapes in the Media Resources Center UC Berkeley
Free Download Syrian Rescue (Executioner)

0 Response to "Ebook Mexico on Main Street Transnational Film Culture in Los Angeles before World War II (Latinidad Transnational Cultures in the United States)"

Post a Comment