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Old Left, New Left, and national culture at the Jorge Negrete Theater
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Chapter 6 treats Siqueiros’s History of Theater and Cinematography in Mexico (1959), painted at the Jorge Negrete Theater and not yet complete upon Siqueiros’s arrest in 1960. Like the other two murals from the late 1950s, the work stands somewhat closer to reformist strands of Marxism, again through references to Mexican anarchist traditions, but also in the media critique the work exacts. Painted at the dawn of the television age, the mural, in dialogue with Siqueiros’s Spanish–Mexican Marxist acquaintance Adolfo Sánchez-Vázquez, mourns the fading possibilities of a truly democratic media sphere in which the masses create theater and film growing from their own everyday lives and seeks to resurrect the possibility of such a sphere by pointing to the radical theater of the Mexican Revolution. The dead worker depicted in the mural comes to represent the death of media democracy as the painting depicts the capitalist degeneration of working-class culture. This loss of what Sánchez-Vázquez called, “truly popular culture,” is a tragedy that runs in tandem with the tragedy of the striking railroad workers, depicted in the mural being beaten down by federal goons. The result, here, is that the anarchist penchant for direct action appears less heroic than at Chapultepec, as a premature attempt at agitation meets with failure.

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Mexican muralist, international Marxist

David Alfaro Siqueiros, 1941–74

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