Sally Faulkner
Search for other papers by Sally Faulkner in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
Introduction
Feminism and Francoism
Abstract only
Log-in for full text

This introduction takes Giuliana Bruno’s metaphor of the ‘ruined map’ of women’s cinema to introduce Cecilia Bartolomé. The ‘map’ of her extant work is comprised of six Film School shorts, to which I devote Chapter One, with a particular focus on La noche del Dr Valdés / Doctor Valdés’s Night (1964) and Carmen de Carabanchel / Carmen from Carabenchel (1965); a Film School medium-length work, Margarita y el lobo / Margarita and the Wolf (1969) (Chapter 2); the features ¡Vámonos, Barbara! / Bárbara, Let’s Go! (1978) and Lejos de África / Far from Africa (1995) (Chapters 4 and 6); the documentary diptych Después de… / Afterwards… (Chapter 5); and the Cuéntame cómo pasó / Tell Me How It Happened television episode ‘El comienzo del fin’ / ‘The Beginning of the End’ (Chapter 7). The Introduction then shows that this map is ‘ruined’ by considering work she was prevented from making. This includes films that censorship under dictatorship prevented her from making; and the censorship under democracy that obstructed the path for finished films to reach audiences. The introduction also considers the neglect of the director’s work in Spanish film historiography; then positively examines the attention paid to the director in recent years. Overall it makes the case for Bartolomé’s urgent inclusion in in national histories of Spanish film; and transnational histories of feminism and women’s cinema.

  • Collapse
  • Expand

All of MUP's digital content including Open Access books and journals is now available on manchesterhive.

 

The cinema of Cecilia Bartolomé

Feminism and Francoism

Metrics

All Time Past Year Past 30 Days
Abstract Views 401 401 37
Full Text Views 7 7 0
PDF Downloads 8 8 0