scholarly journals Narrativas de representación en el cine de autor latinoamericano: Buenos Aires Viceversa, la crítica y los recursos de análisis

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
pp. 423-443
Author(s):  
Patricia Delponti ◽  
Carmen Rodríguez Wangüemert

Como aporte para ahondar en las narrativas de representación de Latinoamérica y sus países, este artículo pretende reforzar el valor del análisis crítico cinematográfico, explorar las mixturas que se produjeron en el tránsito del documental a la ficción, en el Nuevo Cine Latinoamericano. Además de mostrar cómo la película Buenos Aires Viceversa (Agresti, 1996), logra construir un pasado representado que ofrece recursos simbólicos inequívocos sobre Argentina. La metodología empleada se estructura en tres etapas, una contextual de revisión de la literatura, seguida de un trabajo de documentación que estudia cómo se ha ocupado de la representación el análisis de la crítica especializada. Por último, se analiza Buenos Aires Viceversa, con un modelo que sitúa a la obra entre el cuerpo creador y el público. Como resultado de dicho análisis, la película se reafirma como un texto precursor de las tendencias audiovisuales latinoamericanas, con una estructura de narraciones concéntricas: las fragmentaciones en la representación de la ciudad (espacio); la de los hijos de desaparecidos de la dictadura (personajes), quienes, sin poseer una memoria factual (historia), se hallan en edad de cuestionamientos y participan en el proceso de ofrecer al público formas concretas de las ideas abstractas que el autor elige proyectar.

2015 ◽  
pp. 687-689
Author(s):  
Elisa Calabrese

En la lente: memoria, referencialidad histórica y documentalismo en el cine latinoamericano actual


1982 ◽  
Vol 99 ◽  
pp. 605-613
Author(s):  
P. S. Conti

Conti: One of the main conclusions of the Wolf-Rayet symposium in Buenos Aires was that Wolf-Rayet stars are evolutionary products of massive objects. Some questions:–Do hot helium-rich stars, that are not Wolf-Rayet stars, exist?–What about the stability of helium rich stars of large mass? We know a helium rich star of ∼40 MO. Has the stability something to do with the wind?–Ring nebulae and bubbles : this seems to be a much more common phenomenon than we thought of some years age.–What is the origin of the subtypes? This is important to find a possible matching of scenarios to subtypes.


1998 ◽  
Vol 26 (152) ◽  
pp. 576
Author(s):  
Oscar H. del Brutto Perrone ◽  
José Antonio Bueri ◽  
Antonio Culebras ◽  
Jordi Matías-Guiu Guía ◽  
Marco Tulio Medina Hernández ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 173-197
Author(s):  
Juliet McMains

This paper interrogates the history of same-sex dancing among women in Buenos Aires' tango scene, focusing on its increasing visibility since 2005. Two overlapping communities of women are invoked. Queer tangueras are queer-identified female tango dancers and their allies who dance tango in a way that attempts to de-link tango's two roles from gender. Rebellious wallflowers are women who practice, teach, perform, and dance with other women in predominantly straight environments. It is argued that the growing acceptance of same-sex dancing in Argentina is due to the confluence of four developments: 1) the rise of tango commerce, 2) innovations of tango nuevo, 3) changing laws and social norms around lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender rights, and 4) synergy between queer tango dancers and heterosexual women who are frustrated by the limits of tango's gender matrix. The author advocates for increased alliances between rebellious wallflowers and queer tangueras, who are often segregated from each other in Buenos Aires' commercial tango industry.


2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 198-225
Author(s):  
Patricia Novillo-Corvalán

This article positions Pablo Neruda's poetry collection Residence on Earth I (written between 1925–1931 and published in 1933) as a ‘text in transit’ that allows us to trace the development of transnational modernist networks through the text's protracted physical journey from British colonial Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) to Madrid, and from José Ortega y Gasset's Revista de Occidente (The Western Review) to T. S. Eliot's The Criterion. By mapping the text's diasporic movement, I seek to reinterpret its complex composition process as part of an anti-imperialist commitment that proposes a form of aesthetic solidarity with artistic modernism in Ceylon, on the one hand, and as a vehicle through which to interrogate the reception and categorisation of Latin American writers and their cultural institutions in a British periodical such as The Criterion, on the other. I conclude with an examination of Neruda's idiosyncratic Spanish translation of Joyce's Chamber Music, which was published in the Buenos Aires little magazine Poesía in 1933, positing that this translation exercise takes to further lengths his decolonising views by giving new momentum to the long-standing question of Hiberno-Latin American relations.


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