|    Login    |    Register

Children on the Threshold in Contemporary Latin American Cinema: Nature, Gender, and Agency

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Children on the Threshold in Contemporary Latin American Cinema: Nature, Gender, and Agency

Contributors:

By (Author) Rachel Randall

ISBN:

9781498555135

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Lexington Books

Publication Date:

10th October 2017

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

791.436523

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

284

Dimensions:

Width 158mm, Height 238mm, Spine 23mm

Weight:

617g

Description

Children on the Threshold in Contemporary Latin American Cinema: Nature, Gender, and Agency analyzes child and adolescent protagonists in Latin American cinema. This book contends that child characters have taken on a critical representational role within Latin American cinema because of their position on the threshold between nature and culture, which converts them into a focus of, and a limit to, state or colonial biopower. Rachel Randall provides a comprehensive examination of the key themes and developments in boys and girls cinematic representations since the adoption of childrens rights discourses in the region. Recommended for scholars interested in Latin American studies, film studies, and cultural studies.

Reviews

This is a highly accomplished book that makes a significant contribution to the field. Randall draws together in new and fruitful ways an impressive range of theories and approaches relating to the representation of the child in cinema. Her readings of the films are superbly nuanced and insightful. -- Joanna Page, University of Cambridge
In this skillful study of the representations and potential meanings of child figures and childhood in a fascinating range of contemporary films from Brazil, Chile, and Colombia, Rachel Randall provides extensive contextualisation (socio-historical, psychoanalytic, and theoretical) of the situations in which they were produced, as well as incisive and revealing analyses. She explores the ways in which these films, which range from conventional narratives to more experimental works and documentaries, portray childrens subjectivity and how the child characters status on the threshold between nature and culture, innocence and knowledge, immaturity and maturity, comes to symbolize so much more. -- Claire Williams, University of Oxford
The corpus of films is geographically and generically diverse (including both fiction films and documentaries), and explores cinematic children from a variety of social, geographic and economic milieus; the theoretical frameworks are well chosen, solidly contextualized and smoothly integrated, as is relevant material on the social and political history of the countries in question. This is a clear and cogent book that makes a crucial contribution to the field, foregrounding questions of ethics and agency without eliding the child's difference from the adult as cinematic subject and scholarly object. -- Studies in Spanish & Latin American Cinemas

Author Bio

Rachel Randall is Leverhulme Post-Doctoral Fellow in Portuguese and Spanish at the University of Oxford.

See all

Other titles from Bloomsbury Publishing PLC