Reproductive rights, othered women, and the making of feminist documentary in Latin America

Feminist Media Studies 2023, VOL. 23, NO. 4 https://doi.org/10.1080/14680777.2022.2027803



Autor: Cervera-Ferrer, Lorena; Bournemouth Film School, Arts University Bournemouth, Bournemouth, UK; lorena.ferrer.17@ucl.ac.uk; http://orcid.org/0000-0003-2348-0193

Keywords: Cine Mujer Mexico; Cine Mujer Colombia; Latin American Women Filmmakers; film collectives; feminist documentary

Abstract: Cine Mujer was the name of two feminist film collectives, one founded in Mexico (1975–1986) and the other in Colombia (1978– 1999). Sharing the same name but with no ties between each other, these collectives produced films that provided different representations of women, politicized personal experiences and domestic spaces, and promoted processes of consciousness-raising. Broadly, this article looks at the Cine Mujer collectives as part of a larger phenomenon that, although informed by second-wave feminism and the New Latin American Cinema, can be better understood within the singular complexity of Latin American women’s movements. Specifically, it analyses two documentaries, Cosas de mujeres (1978) and Carmen Carrascal (1982), produced by the Cine Mujer collectives in Mexico and Colombia, respectively. Drawing on Laura Marks’ work on hybridity, excess, and haptic visuality, this article explores the relation between modes of production and representation in these films and positions them as emblematic examples of a formative moment in Latin American feminist documentary. By emphasizing the emotional and sensorial appeal of these films, this article also attempts to expand what is understood by political cinema.

Idioma: Inglés 

Publicación: 13 de febrero del 2022

Volumen: Feminist Media Studies 2023, VOL. 23, NO. 4

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