Patricia Torres San Martín
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Lost and invisible
A history of Latin American women filmmakers
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The participation of Latin American women in cinema is an invisible, hidden and incomplete history, which needs to be written, disseminated and linked to current film practices. This chapter revises the trajectories and cinematic practices of Latin American women in two countries with a longstanding film industry, namely Brazil and Mexico, with a particular emphasis on paradigmatic feature films produced by these female directors from the 1930s to the 1980s. Following in the steps of the vigorous and visionary enterprise of the pioneers, women filmmakers rose above social restrictions and maintained an active presence within the industry. Matilde Landeta's heroines, commit gender transgression, as they are powerful and independent women who are recognised for their moral strength and gender awareness. The chapter also discusses the transitional period in the 1950s and 1960s in which a revolutionary project emerged, known as the New Latin American Cinema.

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Hispanic and Lusophone women filmmakers

Theory, practice and difference

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