Available Formats
Feminism and Folk Art: Case Studies in Mexico, New Zealand, Japan, and Brazil
By (Author) Eli Bartra
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
2nd July 2021
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
The arts: general topics
The Arts: techniques and principles
Folklore studies / Study of myth
Gender studies: women and girls
745.082
Paperback
152
Width 153mm, Height 220mm, Spine 10mm
254g
This book is a mosaic or quilt of folk art around the world, from polychrome clay figures made in Izcar de Matamoros, Puebla (Mexico) to the baskets Maori women create in New Zealand, from Japanese lacquer work and decorated paddles to black dolls in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The creative impulse found in three continents, four countries, and four geographical regions are juxtaposed to make up a harmonious whole. The book carries out a detailed dissection of a variety of ethnic, racialized, and gender representations in their contemporary forms.
Feminism and Folk Art offers a refreshingly delightful read of women artists working in different parts of the world, specifically, in Mexico, New Zealand, Japan, and Brazil. The book not only provides the history of folk art in these countries, but, more importantly, brings women from their hidden silences or obscurity into the limelight. For, by the very act of documenting their herstories in relation to their artistic endeavors, they become a vivid and viable part of posterity. . . . Feminism and Folk Art: Case Studies in Mexico, New Zealand, Japan, and Brazil is a very interesting and detailed book about the place and role of women folk artists in four geographical locations, situated in four countries and on three continents. The plurality of settings and experiences further adds to the importance of this book as a contribution to the discussion of womens art from a feminist perspective.
* Journal of Folklore Research *Eli Bartra is distinguished professor at the Universidad Autnoma Metropolitana-Xochimilco, Mexico City.