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  • In the 1960s, topless entertainment became legal in San Francisco, although cross-dressing continued to be criminalized. This article documents queer Latina/x visual and performance cultures of San Francisco’s strip club industry during this critical moment. It employs visual and performance analyses that draw from ethnographic interviews and archival research about three Latinas who performed as exotic dancers during this period, two of whom were out transsexuals: Roxanne Lorraine Alegria, Vicki Starr, and Lola Raquel. Engaging Marcia Ochoa’s notion of “spectacular femininities” and Juana María Rodríguez’s theory of “queer gesture,” the article maps out a queer Latina/x herstoriography about the early days of topless entertainment in San Francisco. It demonstrates how the transgressive practices of these Latina performers enrich genealogies of queer and Latina/x performance and visual cultures since the 1960s. It thus contributes to the expansion and intersection of the fields of performance studies, Latina/x studies, and feminist, gender, and sexuality studies. These fields and their intertwinings offer critical tools to resist the sexism, homophobia, racism, transphobia, and whorephobia that pervade every level of society, as well as the cultural amnesia to which San Francisco has been increasingly prone due to its incessant gentrification and growing technocracy since the early 2010s.RESUMEN Este artículo documenta las culturas visuales y de performance latinas/x queer de los clubes de striptease de San Francisco durante un momento crítico en la historia de la ciudad. En la década de 1960, los shows en topless se legalizaron en San Francisco, aunque el travestismo se continuó criminalizando. Otálvaro-Hormillosa emplea análisis visuales y de performance que se basan en entrevistas etnográficas e investigación de archivo sobre tres latinas que actuaron como bailarinas exóticas durante este período, dos de las cuales reconocían públicamente que eran transexuales: Roxanne Lorraine Alegria, Vicki Starr y Lola Raquel. En diálogo con la noción de “feminidades espectaculares” de Marcia Ochoa y la teoría de “gestos queer” de Juana María Rodríguez, Otálvaro-Hormillosa describe una historiografía latina/x queer propiamente femenina sobre los primeros días del entretenimiento en topless en San Francisco. El artículo demuestra cómo las prácticas transgresoras de estas intérpretes latinas enriquecen las genealogías de las culturas visuales y de performance queer y latinas/x desde los años sesenta. Al hacerlo, contribuye a la expansión e intersección de los campos de los estudios de performance, estudios latinas/x, y estudios feministas, de género y de sexualidad. Estos campos y sus entrecruzamientos pueden ofrecer herramientas críticas para resistir el sexismo, la homofobia, el racismo, la transfobia y la putafobia que permea todos los niveles de la sociedad, así como la amnesia cultural a la que San Francisco ha sido cada vez más propenso debido a su incesante gentrificación y creciente tecnocracia desde principios de los años 2010.RESUMO Este artigo documenta a cultura visual e de performance na indústria de clubes de strip-tease de São Francisco, durante um momento crítico da história da cidade. Nos anos 60, o entretenimento topless se tornou legal em São Francisco, embora a prática do cross-dressing continuasse criminalizada. Otálvaro-Hormillosa emprega análise visual e de performance baseadas em entrevistas etnográficas e pesquisas de arquivos sobre três latinas que se apresentaram como dançarinas exóticas durante esse período, duas das quais eram transexuais: Roxanne Lorraine Alegria, Vicki Starr e Lola Raquel. Engajando a noção de “feminilidades espetaculares” de Marcia Ochoa e a teoria do “gesto queer” de Juana María Rodríguez, Otálvaro-Hormillosa mapeia uma herstoriografia queer latina/x sobre os sobre os primórdios do entretenimento topless em São Francisco. O artigo demonstra como as práticas transgressivas dessas artistas latinas enriquecem as genealogias das culturas visual e de performance queer e latina/x desde os anos 1960. Deste modo, contribui para a expansão e intersecção dos campos de estudos da performance, estudos latinos e estudos feministas, de gênero e sexualidade. Esses campos e seus entrelaçamentos podem oferecer ferramentas críticas para resistir ao sexismo, homofobia, racismo, transfobia e putafobia que permeiam todos os níveis da sociedade, bem como a amnésia cultural para a qual San Francisco tem sido cada vez mais propensa devido à sua gentrificação incessante e crescente tecnocracia desde o início dos anos 2010.

  • In this paper I offer a brief overview of the academic debates about post-colonial theories and the concept of coloniality, seeking to map out their Latin American translations, especially from the perspective of feminist theories in relation to the coloniality of gender. By emphasizing an intersectional approach to understand the gendered character of coloniality, decolonial feminists are seeking innovative ways of articulating new epistemologies or “saberes propios”. However, in these debates little attention has been given to the issue of the travels and translations of decolonial feminisms in Latin America. In focusing on the vexed issue of translation, I want to explore some of the challenges Latin American decolonial feminists are facing today.

  • La perspectiva de género en el arte del Caribe colombiano se puede contextualizar con el movimiento feminista planetario. La comparación se establece en las creaciones de mujeres artistas de esta región, ya que subvierten, manifiestan y revelan con denotada libertad expresiva, no solamente sus inquietudes intimistas, sino toda una serie de cuestionamientos a las condiciones que culturalmente se le han impuesto a la mujer en el Caribe. Son dos generaciones diferentes; las primeras, analizadas en esta entrega, pueden ser catalogadas como pioneras de la perspectiva de género en el arte colombiano. Las segundas, consolidan problemáticas en apuestas individuales, de manera diaspórica y cada vez más comprometidas con el movimiento social de mujeres. En ambos casos lo hacen a través de las artes visuales, audiovisuales, performáticas e híbridas. Estamos ante artistas vanguardistas, de las artes visuales y performáticas en el Caribe colombiano; preferimos llamarlas, en ambos casos, visionarias. Gender perspective in the Colombian Caribbean art can be contextualized within the worldwide feminist movement. The comparison is established in the artwork of female artists from this region, as they subvert, demonstrate, and reveal with poignant expressive freedom, not only their intimate concerns, but a whole series of questions to the conditions that have been culturally imposed on women in the Caribbean. They come from two different generations. The first generation, analyzed in this installment, can be defined as the pioneers of gender perspective in Colombian art. The second generation consolidates issues through individual pledges in a diasporic way and increasingly committed to the social women’s movement. Both generations do this through performative, hybrid, visual and audiovisual art. These are avant-garde artists of the visual and performative art in the Colombian Caribbean. We prefer to call them, in both cases, visionaries.

  • Este trabajo se propone comprender la incidencia de las relaciones de poder que ciertas representaciones temporales acerca de grupos indígenas pueden ejercer en nuestra comprensión pasada y actual. Diversas imágenes reprodujeron ideas de indígenas que, aunque estuvieran vivos, mostraban una cultura asimilada a un pasado de amplias dimensiones. Por lo tanto, para comprender el proceso de invisibilización de la diversidad indígena en la cultura nacional, es relevante considerar los mecanismos de montaje discursivo —visuales y textuales—, vinculados con las nociones temporales de indios viviendo en un supuesto tiempo remoto. Atendiendo a ello, se analizan los procesos de montaje, desde la producción de las fotografías hasta la edición y presentación de imágenes, tanto en la prensa como en postales, publicaciones científicas y de divulgación, para ver cómo a veces pequeños cambios de encuadre, contraste, retoque o selección pueden incidir en la construcción de diversas historias, en la comprensión y en los sentidos construidos y en pugna.

  • La memoria hace referencia a un conjunto de funciones psíquicas que permiten la actualización de imágenes de hechos pasados o que se representan como pasados. A diferencia de los estudios históricos, los de la memoria resaltan las subjetividades, amplían la discusión más allá del recuerdo y el olvido, y desplazan el debate hacia quien tiene el derecho a narrar su historia y aquellos que en ella se encuentran. Las inquietudes en torno a la memoria y sus lugares también se hacen visibles en el inquieto horizonte artístico, en el que pasados recientes y distantes se articulan en registros sobre diversas formas de traumas. Este artículo propone una reflexión sobre las relaciones entre arte y memoria a partir de la producción de dos artistas brasileñas contemporáneas: Rosana Paulino (São Paulo, 1968) y Aline Motta (Niterói, 1974). El análisis de esa producción se fundamenta en la interdisciplinaridad de los estudios de la memoria y destaca cómo la creación artística ofrece una posibilidad de resignificación individual y colectiva. Asimismo, conceptúa memorias americoafricanas como aquellas que emergen no solo en la memoria individual de las artistas presentadas en este artículo, sino también en la de muchas otras mujeres que se identifican con Americoáfrica como un sistema etnogeográfico de referencia. Son memorias americoafricanas porque se han gestado en la resistencia y creatividad contra la opresión, la humillación y la deshumanización, y que se insurgen contra la historia única proponiendo una revisión de la historiografía del país y del arte producido a partir de esos lugares. Memory refers to a set of psychic functions that allow the updating of images of past events or events that are represented as past. Unlike historical studies, memory studies highlight subjectivities, expand the discussion beyond memory and oblivion, and shift the debate towards who has the right to narrate their history and those who are in it. The concerns about memory and its places also become visible in the restless artistic horizon, in which recent and distant pasts are articulated in registers about various forms of trauma. This paper proposes a reflection on the relationship between art and memory based on the production of two contemporary Brazilian artists: Rosana Paulino (São Paulo, 1968) and Aline Motta (Niterói, 1974). The analysis of this production is based on the interdisciplinary nature of memory studies and highlights how artistic creation offers a possibility of individual and collective resignification. Likewise, it conceptualizes African-American memories as those that emerge not only in the individual memory of the artists presented in this article, but also in that of many other women who identify with Africa-America, as a reference ethnogeographic system. They are African-American memories because they have been born in resistance and creativity against oppression, humiliation and dehumanization, and because they insurrect against the unique history, proposing a review of the historiography of the country and the art produced out of those places.

  • Este texto reflexiona sobre los discursos e imaginarios de género y sexualidad que se producen dentro del campo del videoarte realizado en Ecuador entre 1998 y 2013. Desde finales de los noventa, hay una presencia de videos que abordan temáticas de cuerpo, política, deseo, violencia, roles e identidad que posicionan nuevos temáticas, lugares de enunciación y sujetos través de las tecnologías de video. A través de un conjunto de obras emblemáticas, el texto analiza los discursos y las estrategias visuales con las cuales se construyen feminidades, masculinidades y diversidades sexuales en el contexto contemporáneo. Está producción plantea un relato alternativo frente a las tendencias dominantes dentro de la historia del arte ecuatoriano. Muestra las nuevas sensibilidades y sujetos que se afirman a través del uso de tecnologías de video. This paper reflects on the speeches and imaginary of gender and sexuality that occur within the field of video art made in Ecuador between 1998 and 2013. Since the late nineties, there is a presence of vid-eos that address issues of body politics, desire, vio-lence, roles and identity that position new themes, places and subjects of enunciation through video technologies. Through a set of emblematic works, the text analyzes the speeches and visual strategies which femininity, masculinity and sexual diversities are built in a contemporary context. This production presents an alternative story against the dominant trends in the history of Ecuadorian art. It shows the new sensibilities and subjects that are affirmed through the use of video technology.

  • Este artículo propone una reflexión sobre las prácticas vitales, artísticas y políticas de Liliana Felipe y Jesusa Rodríguez y sus experiencias de desobediencia frente a los regímenes de sexualidad y género articulados a regímenes de terror en México y Argentina. La metodología usada para llegar a la reflexión fue un análisis crítico multimodal del discurso hecho desde una perspectiva interseccional y descolonial que supone el análisis tanto de contextos como de los textos, subtextos y texturas que componen la obra y vida de estas artistas. Desde esta postura epistemológica, la obra performática y musical de Liliana y Jesusa es vista como un acervo de discursos multimodales. Nuestra reflexión muestra cómo la creación, la experiencia —entendida como lugar político— y las propuestas colectivas de Liliana y Jesusa se ponen en juego en un campo de lucha performativa donde sus discursos desobedientes proponen maneras de resistencia y fuga a los regímenes coloniales-modernos- capitalistas de género y sexualidad. Jesusa y Liliana proponen una obra multimodal y multimedial que fisura los límites de los géneros discursivos, los géneros musicales, el género gramatical y el sistema sexo género, lo cual amerita una mirada indisciplinada. Este artículo resulta ser un abordaje novedoso en la medida en que se acerca a la experiencia y a la obra de estas dos mujeres, no desde una visión disciplinar, sino a partir de una mirada transdisciplinaria, interseccional y descolonial que asume la producción artística como una apuesta política donde los límites entre lo personal y lo público se borran. This article seeks to do a reflection both on the vital, artistic and political practices of Liliana Felipe and Jesusa Rodríguez and on their experiences of disobedience to the regimes of sexuality and gender, which are articulated to regimes of terror in Mexico and Argentina. The methodology used in order to make this reflection was a Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis from both an intersectional and decolonial perspective. This methodology implies the analysis of contexts, texts, subtexts and textures that make up the work and life of these artists. From this epistemological position, the performative and musical work of Liliana and Jesusa is seen as a collection of multimodal discourses. Creation, experience —understood as a political locus— and the collective proposals of Liliana and Jesusa are put into play in a field of performative struggle where their disobedient discourses propose ways of resistance to colonial-modern-capitalist regimes of gender and sexuality.Jesusa and Liliana propose a multimodal and multimedial work that fissures the limits of the discursive genres, the musical genres, the grammatical gender and the gender sex system, which deserves an undisciplined look. This article proposes an original approach insofar as it approaches the experience and work of these two women not from a disciplinary view, but from a transdisciplinary, intersectional and decolonial point of view, that assumes artistic production as a political commitment in where the boundaries between the personal and the public are erased.

  • El espesor de este libro es propio de este tiempo. Cuerpos que se desplazan en masivas inmigraciones huyendo de todo tipo de violencias alcanzan a más de sesenta millones de personas, la mayor cifra de refugiados desde la segunda guerra mundial. El mundo experimenta una crisis humanitaria sobrecogedora ante la cual las potencias apelan a los mismos discursos que ya Aimé Césaire o Fanon condenaran. Dramatismo del exilio de este nomadismo a escala planetaria, al cual Stuart Hall calificaría como “amensia imperial”. Genealogías críticas de la colonialidad en América Latina, África, Oriente es un libro que deja al descubierto la piel del mundo contemporáneo. Un hecho cultural disruptivo que, anudado a una genealogía latinoamericana abierta a sí misma y hacia Otros Sures se interroga sobre los intrincados modos de narrar y silenciar los pasados coloniales.

  • Interview with author, Dr. Laura Pérez, Professor of Ethnic Studies at UC Berkeley on her most recent book, Eros Ideologies: Writings on Art, Sprituality, & the Decolonial.

  • In 'Eros Ideologies' Laura E. Perez explores the decolonial through Western and non-Western thought concerning personal and social well-being. Drawing upon Jungian, people-of-color, and spiritual psychology alongside non-Western spiritual philosophies of the interdependence of all life-forms, she writes of the decolonial as an ongoing project rooted in love as an ideology to frame respectful coexistence of social and cultural diversity. In readings of art that includes self-portraits by Frida Kahlo, Ana Mendieta, and Yreina D. Cervantez, the drawings and paintings of Chilean American artist Liliana Wilson, and Favianna Rodriguez's screen-printed images, Perez identifies art as one of the most valuable laboratories for creating, imagining, and experiencing new forms of decolonial thought. Such art expresses what Perez calls eros ideologies: understandings of social and natural reality that foreground the centrality of respect and care of self and others as the basis for a more democratic and responsible present and future. Employing a range of writing styles and voices-from the poetic to the scholarly-Perez shows how art can point to more just and loving ways of being.

  • The Latinx Research Center's Revista N'oj hosted a round table discussion on Decolonial Aesthetics titled, "Decolonizing Art & Praxis in the Time of Covid-19." The talk included Jesus Barraza, Dr. Guisela Latorre, Dr. Mauricio Barros de Castro, and Dr. Laura E. Pérez. The panel was moderated by Revista N'oj editor, Abraham Ramirez.

  • "By bringing together a provocative selection of essays and images, Only Skin Deep: Changing Visions of the American Self addresses the issues of nation, race, and selfhood and how they are depicted in ways that are challenging and informative, prompting readers to consider the impact of photography on our everyday lives." "If photographs are chiefly responsible for perpetuating myths of American identity, can a different reading of these representations break down distorting stereotypes? This is the central question posed by Only Skin Deep. The authors in this book forcefully argue that race and nation - and, indeed, photography itself - are fictions, cultural constructions that shape our social interactions. Even as symbols, these photographic depictions of ethnic difference and cultural superiority have very real consequences. This collection of works and essays addresses, for example, the lingering consequences of American colonial expansion; the conflict between public and private visualizations of individuals; the role of commercial imagery in shaping gender roles; the impact of fantasy in ethnic or ethnographic photography; and the uses of science to provide justification for politicized depictions of "race."" "Accompanying a major exhibition of the same name, Only Skin Deep offers a critical rereading of the archive of the history of photography. This applies to the works of famous photographers - such as Dorothea Lange, Walker Evans, Ansel Adams, and Edward Steichen - as well as lesser-known historical figures, including Charles Eisenmann, Frances Benjamin Johnston, Will Soule, and Toyo Miyatake. A substantial part of the book is devoted to contemporary artists and photographers who have moved beyond the multicultural approach to representations of "race" and have made an investigation of the semiotics of cultural identity a prevalent theme over the past decade. Among the recent photographers included are: Nancy Burson, Nikki S. Lee, Glenn Ligon, Paul Pfeiffer, Hulleah Tsinhnahjinnie, Cindy Sherman, Lorna Simpson, and Andres Serrano."--(BOOK JACKET)

  • This landmark work of history and theory challenges every accepted notion about the nature of black women’s lives. Ain’t I A Woman examines the impact of sexism on black women during slavery, the historic devaluation of black womanhood, black male sexism, racism within the recent women’s movement, and black women’s involvement with feminism. hooks refutes the antifeminist claim that black women are not victims of sexist oppression nor in need of an autonomous women’s movement. She pushes feminist dialogue to new limits by claiming that all progressive struggles are significant only when they take place within a broadly defined feminist movement which takes as its starting point that race, class, and sex are immutable facts of human existence. bell hooks’ insight as a black woman and a feminist extends the scope of feminist theory and practice for us all, and marks the emergence of a revitalized feminism in the 1980s.

  • "In the critical essays collected in Black Looks, bell hooks interrogates old narratives and argues for alternative ways to look at blackness, black subjectivity, and whiteness. Her focus is on spectatorship--in particular, the way blackness and black people are experienced in literature, music, television, and especially film--and her aim is to create a radical intervention into the way we talk about race and representation. As she describes: 'The essays in Black Looks are meant to challenge and unsettle, to disrupt and subvert.' As students, scholars, activists, intellectuals, and any other readers who have engaged with the book since its original release in 1992 can attest, that's exactly what these pieces do"(Provided by publisher)

  • "The Routledge Companion to Media and Race serves as a comprehensive guide for scholars, students, and media professionals who seek to understand the key debates about the impact of media messages on racial attitudes and understanding. Broad in scope and richly presented from a diversity of perspectives, the book is divided into three sections: first, it summarizes the theoretical approaches that scholars have adopted to analyze the complexities of media messages about race and ethnicity, from the notion of 'representation' to more recent concepts like Critical Race Theory. Second, the book reviews studies related to a variety of media, including film, television, print media, social media, music, and video games. Finally, contributors present a broad summary of media issues related to specific races and ethnicities and describe the relationship of the study of race to the study of gender and sexuality"--Provided by publisher.

  • "Although the fields of media studies and digital humanities are both well established, their overlaps have not been examined in depth. This comprehensive collection fills that gap, giving students, scholars, and media studies practitioners a cutting-edge guide to understanding the array of methodologies and projects operating at the intersection of digital humanities, computing, and culture. Topics covered include: networks; interfaces; media and culture at scale; procedures, programming, code; memory, digitization, and new media; and hacking, queering, and bending."--Provided by publisher

  • Game Devs & Others: Tales from the Margins tell the true stories of life in the industry by people of color, LGBTQIA and other marginalized identities. This collection of essays give people a chance to tell their stories and to let others know what life on the other side of the screen is like when you’re not part of the supposed “majority”. Key Features This book is perfect for anyone interested in getting into the games industry who feels they have a marginalized identity For those who wish to better diversify their studio or workplace who may or may not have access to individuals that could or would share their stories about the industry Includes initiatives aimed at diversifying the industry that have a positive or negative impact on the ongoing discussions Coverage of ajor news items about diversity, conferences aimed at or having diversity at its core of content and mission are discussed Included essays are written with as little game dev specific jargon as possible, makeing it accessible to people outside the industry as well as those in the scene but that may not have all the insider lingo

  • Have you ever wanted to know which games to use in your classroom, library, or afterschool program, or even at home? Which games can help teach preschoolers, K-12, college students, or adults? What can you use for science, literature, or critical thinking skills? This book explores 100 different games and how educators have used the games to teach - what worked and didn't work and their tips and techniques. The list of 100 goes from A to Z Safari to Zoombinis, and includes popular games like Fortnite, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare, and Minecraft, as well as PC, mobile, VR, AR, card and board games.

  • Women and racial/ethnic minorities account for a growing percentage of video game players in the USA. The economic future of the video game industry may, in part, depend on the industry's ability to adapt marketing efforts to appeal to the growing female and racial/ethnic markets. Contrary to these efforts, however, is advertisers' reliance on stereotypes in advertisements to quickly establish a common understanding and wide appeal to a mass audience. This study investigates how race and gender intersect in the stereotypical character depictions used to market video games to consumers. A systematic content analysis was carried out of 383 US magazine advertisements of console, mobile, and PC video games. Stereotyping and intersectionality literatures were used as theoretical guides for this research. Findings reveal that the marketing of video games in the USA upholds some longstanding media stereotypes of minorities and women, including that of the White male hero, submissive sexualized female, Asian ninja, and deviant Black male. The potential social and economic implications of the video game industry's reliance on character stereotypes for the marketing of video games are discussed.

Dernière mise à jour depuis la base de données : 26/10/2025 13:00 (EDT)