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1
-
-
0003888263
-
-
London, Routledge
-
Richard Dyer, White (London, Routledge, 1997), p. 36.
-
(1997)
White
, pp. 36
-
-
Dyer, R.1
-
2
-
-
84937341107
-
Fixing the color line: The mulatto, southern courts, and racial identity
-
Teresa Zackodnik, 'Fixing the color line: the mulatto, southern courts, and racial identity', American Quarterly (Vol. 53, no. 3, 2001), p. 427.
-
(2001)
American Quarterly
, vol.53
, Issue.3
, pp. 427
-
-
Zackodnik, T.1
-
3
-
-
0141603608
-
After about 1680, taking the colonies as a whole, a new term of self-identification appeared - White
-
Jordan (Oxford, Oxford University Press)
-
Winthrop Jordan commented: 'After about 1680, taking the colonies as a whole, a new term of self-identification appeared - white.' Jordan, The White Man's Burden (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1974), p. 52.
-
(1974)
The White Man's Burden
, pp. 52
-
-
Jordan, W.1
-
4
-
-
84976024610
-
Slave spectacles and tragic octoroons: A cultural genealogy of antebellum performance
-
November
-
See Joseph R. Roach, 'Slave spectacles and tragic octoroons: a cultural genealogy of antebellum performance', Theatre Survey (Vol. 33, November 1992), pp. 167-87; and Nancy Bentley, 'White slaves: the mulatto hero in antebellum fiction', American Literature (Vol. 65, no. 3, September 1993), pp. 501-22.
-
(1992)
Theatre Survey
, vol.33
, pp. 167-187
-
-
Roach, J.R.1
-
5
-
-
84976024610
-
White slaves: The mulatto hero in antebellum fiction
-
September
-
See Joseph R. Roach, 'Slave spectacles and tragic octoroons: a cultural genealogy of antebellum performance', Theatre Survey (Vol. 33, November 1992), pp. 167-87; and Nancy Bentley, 'White slaves: the mulatto hero in antebellum fiction', American Literature (Vol. 65, no. 3, September 1993), pp. 501-22.
-
(1993)
American Literature
, vol.65
, Issue.3
, pp. 501-522
-
-
Bentley, N.1
-
8
-
-
0003485028
-
-
New York, Negro Universities Press (original 1918)
-
Edward Byron Reuter, The Mulatto in the United States (New York, Negro Universities Press, 1969 (original 1918)), p. 131.
-
(1969)
The Mulatto in the United States
, pp. 131
-
-
Reuter, E.B.1
-
9
-
-
0006723599
-
-
Berkeley, University of California Press
-
See Kevin Brownlow, Behind the Mask of Innocence (Berkeley, University of California Press, 1990), p. 375.
-
(1990)
Behind the Mask of Innocence
, pp. 375
-
-
Brownlow, K.1
-
10
-
-
0039451488
-
-
Philadelphia, PA, Temple University Press
-
Ed Guerrero, Framing Blackness (Philadelphia, PA, Temple University Press, 1993), p. 27. Describing his research into Hollywood films between 1915 and 1975, Guerrero wrote: 'By examining the depiction of slaves and slavery over the continuum of Hollywood's plantation genre, we confront a number of issues about the creation and ideological function of these representations, narratives, and images persistent so long after the abolition of slavery itself and the collapse of the antebellum South.' Ibid., p. 10.
-
(1993)
Framing Blackness
, pp. 27
-
-
Guerrero, E.1
-
11
-
-
0003494096
-
-
Ed Guerrero, framing Blackness (Philadelphia, PA, Temple University Press, 1993), p. 27. Describing his research into Hollywood films between 1915 and 1975, Guerrero wrote: 'By examining the depiction of slaves and slavery over the continuum of Hollywood's plantation genre, we confront a number of issues about the creation and ideological function of these representations, narratives, and images persistent so long after the abolition of slavery itself and the collapse of the antebellum South.' Ibid., p. 10.
-
Framing Blackness
, pp. 10
-
-
-
12
-
-
0141603605
-
-
Lawrence, TX, University Press of Kansas
-
Gerald R. Butters, Jr, Black Manhood on the Silent Screen (Lawrence, TX, University Press of Kansas, 2002), pp. 27-8.
-
(2002)
Black Manhood on the Silent Screen
, pp. 27-28
-
-
Butters G.R., Jr.1
-
13
-
-
0040088516
-
-
Bloomington, Indiana University Press, passim
-
By the early twentieth century, the Black middle class tended to associate in exclusive clubs and resorts, select schools and churches, cultural and athletic clubs, salons and domestic parlours. See Willard B. Gatewood, Aristocrats of Color (Bloomington, Indiana University Press, 1990), passim.
-
(1990)
Aristocrats of Color
-
-
Gatewood, W.B.1
-
15
-
-
22644431821
-
Wilson behind segregation
-
19 November
-
'Wilson behind segregation', The New York Age (19 November 1914), p. 1.
-
(1914)
The New York Age
, pp. 1
-
-
-
18
-
-
0141826614
-
-
New York, Limelight
-
Schickel claims the film, originally entitled The Clansman, was retitled in early March after 'Griffith dropped a love scene between Senator Stoneman and his mulatto mistress and a scene in which a black and a white engaged in a fight...'. Richard Schickel, D. W. Griffith: an American life (New York, Limelight, 1996), p. 282.
-
(1996)
D. W. Griffith: An American Life
, pp. 282
-
-
Schickel, R.1
-
23
-
-
0004109194
-
-
New York, Continuum, pp. 147ff
-
Donald Bogle, Toms, Coons, Mulattoes, Mammies & Bucks (New York, Continuum, 2001), pp. 147ff.
-
(2001)
Toms, Coons, Mulattoes, Mammies & Bucks
-
-
Bogle, D.1
-
24
-
-
33744815141
-
-
Mexico City, Secretaria de Educación Pública
-
Emilio García Riera, Historia Del Cine Mexicano (Mexico City, Secretaria de Educación Pública, 2000), p. 158. Carl J. Mora agrees, see Mora, Mexican Cinema, Reflections of a Society, 1896-1980 (Berkeley, University of California Press, 1982), pp. 74-5.
-
(2000)
Historia Del Cine Mexicano
, pp. 158
-
-
Riera, E.G.1
-
25
-
-
0004042399
-
-
Berkeley, University of California Press
-
Emilio García Riera, Historia Del Cine Mexicano (Mexico City, Secretaria de Educación Pública, 2000), p. 158. Carl J. Mora agrees, see Mora, Mexican Cinema, Reflections of a Society, 1896-1980 (Berkeley, University of California Press, 1982), pp. 74-5.
-
(1982)
Mexican Cinema, Reflections of a Society, 1896-1980
, pp. 74-75
-
-
Mora1
-
26
-
-
0004042399
-
-
ch. 1
-
Ibid., ch. 1. Garcia A. Gustavo maintains that the subjects of many domestic films were government officials and wealthy families strolling down the main boulevards of Mexico City. See Garcia, 'In quest of a national cinema: the silent era', in Joanne Hershfield and David R. Maciel (eds), Mexico's Cinema (Wilmington, DE, Scholarly Resources, 1999), pp. 5-16.
-
Mexican Cinema, Reflections of a Society, 1896-1980
-
-
-
27
-
-
0141603609
-
In quest of a national cinema: The silent era
-
Joanne Hershfield and David R. Maciel (eds), (Wilmington, DE, Scholarly Resources)
-
Ibid., ch. 1. Garcia A. Gustavo maintains that the subjects of many domestic films were government officials and wealthy families strolling down the main boulevards of Mexico City. See Garcia, 'In quest of a national cinema: the silent era', in Joanne Hershfield and David R. Maciel (eds), Mexico's Cinema (Wilmington, DE, Scholarly Resources, 1999), pp. 5-16.
-
(1999)
Mexico's Cinema
, pp. 5-16
-
-
Garcia1
-
28
-
-
0003619497
-
-
Stanford, CA, Stanford University Press
-
For the early years of the revolution, see Friedrich Katz, The Life and Times of Poncho Villa (Stanford, CA, Stanford University Press, 1998).
-
(1998)
The Life and Times of Poncho Villa
-
-
Katz, F.1
-
31
-
-
0141715264
-
-
Ibid., pp. 23-4. Pancho Villa initially received favourable treatment in Hollywood. In 1914, he contracted with the Mutual Film Company for the latter to film news-reels of his battles with Huerta's troops. Mutual used the newsreels to produce a fictive narrative entitled The Life of General Villa (1914). In 1916, after Villa's raids in New Mexico, his Hollywood image changed dramatically. Eagle Films Manufacturing and Producing Company produced an anti-Villa tract entitled Villa Dead or Alive, and Feinberg Amusement Corporation added its support for the punitive expedition, Following the Flag in Mexico. See Katz, op. cit., pp. 324-6. William Randolph Hearst, an investor in Latin American mines and a huge land-owner in Mexico, was also fairly vexed with the Mexican revolution. Hearst's own studio produced Patria (1915), a fifteen-part serial whose plot 'depicted a Japanese-Mexican invasion of the United States and clearly was designed to capitalize on the nervousness many Americans felt over revolution in Mexico, Japanese involvement south of the Rio Grande, and United States-Japanese tensions'. Mora, op cit., p. 24. For Hearst's Mexican holdings, see Katz, op. cit., p. 157.
-
Mexican Cinema, Reflections of a Society, 1896-1980
, pp. 23-24
-
-
-
32
-
-
0141603614
-
-
Ibid., pp. 23-4. Pancho Villa initially received favourable treatment in Hollywood. In 1914, he contracted with the Mutual Film Company for the latter to film news-reels of his battles with Huerta's troops. Mutual used the newsreels to produce a fictive narrative entitled The Life of General Villa (1914). In 1916, after Villa's raids in New Mexico, his Hollywood image changed dramatically. Eagle Films Manufacturing and Producing Company produced an anti-Villa tract entitled Villa Dead or Alive, and Feinberg Amusement Corporation added its support for the punitive expedition, Following the Flag in Mexico. See Katz, op. cit., pp. 324-6. William Randolph Hearst, an investor in Latin American mines and a huge land-owner in Mexico, was also fairly vexed with the Mexican revolution. Hearst's own studio produced Patria (1915), a fifteen-part serial whose plot 'depicted a Japanese-Mexican invasion of the United States and clearly was designed to capitalize on the nervousness many Americans felt over revolution in Mexico, Japanese involvement south of the Rio Grande, and United States-Japanese tensions'. Mora, op cit., p. 24. For Hearst's Mexican holdings, see Katz, op. cit., p. 157.
-
(1914)
The Life of General Villa
-
-
-
33
-
-
0141491977
-
-
Ibid., pp. 23-4. Pancho Villa initially received favourable treatment in Hollywood. In 1914, he contracted with the Mutual Film Company for the latter to film news-reels of his battles with Huerta's troops. Mutual used the newsreels to produce a fictive narrative entitled The Life of General Villa (1914). In 1916, after Villa's raids in New Mexico, his Hollywood image changed dramatically. Eagle Films Manufacturing and Producing Company produced an anti-Villa tract entitled Villa Dead or Alive, and Feinberg Amusement Corporation added its support for the punitive expedition, Following the Flag in Mexico. See Katz, op. cit., pp. 324-6. William Randolph Hearst, an investor in Latin American mines and a huge land-owner in Mexico, was also fairly vexed with the Mexican revolution. Hearst's own studio produced Patria (1915), a fifteen-part serial whose plot 'depicted a Japanese-Mexican invasion of the United States and clearly was designed to capitalize on the nervousness many Americans felt over revolution in Mexico, Japanese involvement south of the Rio Grande, and United States-Japanese tensions'. Mora, op cit., p. 24. For Hearst's Mexican holdings, see Katz, op. cit., p. 157.
-
Villa Dead or Alive
-
-
-
34
-
-
0141491979
-
-
Ibid., pp. 23-4. Pancho Villa initially received favourable treatment in Hollywood. In 1914, he contracted with the Mutual Film Company for the latter to film news-reels of his battles with Huerta's troops. Mutual used the newsreels to produce a fictive narrative entitled The Life of General Villa (1914). In 1916, after Villa's raids in New Mexico, his Hollywood image changed dramatically. Eagle Films Manufacturing and Producing Company produced an anti-Villa tract entitled Villa Dead or Alive, and Feinberg Amusement Corporation added its support for the punitive expedition, Following the Flag in Mexico. See Katz, op. cit., pp. 324-6. William Randolph Hearst, an investor in Latin American mines and a huge land-owner in Mexico, was also fairly vexed with the Mexican revolution. Hearst's own studio produced Patria (1915), a fifteen-part serial whose plot 'depicted a Japanese-Mexican invasion of the United States and clearly was designed to capitalize on the nervousness many Americans felt over revolution in Mexico, Japanese involvement south of the Rio Grande, and United States-Japanese tensions'. Mora, op cit., p. 24. For Hearst's Mexican holdings, see Katz, op. cit., p. 157.
-
Following the Flag in Mexico
-
-
-
35
-
-
0003619497
-
-
Ibid., pp. 23-4. Pancho Villa initially received favourable treatment in Hollywood. In 1914, he contracted with the Mutual Film Company for the latter to film news-reels of his battles with Huerta's troops. Mutual used the newsreels to produce a fictive narrative entitled The Life of General Villa (1914). In 1916, after Villa's raids in New Mexico, his Hollywood image changed dramatically. Eagle Films Manufacturing and Producing Company produced an anti-Villa tract entitled Villa Dead or Alive, and Feinberg Amusement Corporation added its support for the punitive expedition, Following the Flag in Mexico. See Katz, op. cit., pp. 324-6. William Randolph Hearst, an investor in Latin American mines and a huge land-owner in Mexico, was also fairly vexed with the Mexican revolution. Hearst's own studio produced Patria (1915), a fifteen-part serial whose plot 'depicted a Japanese-Mexican invasion of the United States and clearly was designed to capitalize on the nervousness many Americans felt over revolution in Mexico, Japanese involvement south of the Rio Grande, and United States-Japanese tensions'. Mora, op cit., p. 24. For Hearst's Mexican holdings, see Katz, op. cit., p. 157.
-
The Life and Times of Poncho Villa
, pp. 324-326
-
-
Katz1
-
36
-
-
0141826613
-
-
Ibid., pp. 23-4. Pancho Villa initially received favourable treatment in Hollywood. In 1914, he contracted with the Mutual Film Company for the latter to film news-reels of his battles with Huerta's troops. Mutual used the newsreels to produce a fictive narrative entitled The Life of General Villa (1914). In 1916, after Villa's raids in New Mexico, his Hollywood image changed dramatically. Eagle Films Manufacturing and Producing Company produced an anti-Villa tract entitled Villa Dead or Alive, and Feinberg Amusement Corporation added its support for the punitive expedition, Following the Flag in Mexico. See Katz, op. cit., pp. 324-6. William Randolph Hearst, an investor in Latin American mines and a huge land-owner in Mexico, was also fairly vexed with the Mexican revolution. Hearst's own studio produced Patria (1915), a fifteen-part serial whose plot 'depicted a Japanese-Mexican invasion of the United States and clearly was designed to capitalize on the nervousness many Americans felt over revolution in Mexico, Japanese involvement south of the Rio Grande, and United States-Japanese tensions'. Mora, op cit., p. 24. For Hearst's Mexican holdings, see Katz, op. cit., p. 157.
-
(1915)
Patria
-
-
Hearst1
-
37
-
-
0004042399
-
-
Ibid., pp. 23-4. Pancho Villa initially received favourable treatment in Hollywood. In 1914, he contracted with the Mutual Film Company for the latter to film news-reels of his battles with Huerta's troops. Mutual used the newsreels to produce a fictive narrative entitled The Life of General Villa (1914). In 1916, after Villa's raids in New Mexico, his Hollywood image changed dramatically. Eagle Films Manufacturing and Producing Company produced an anti-Villa tract entitled Villa Dead or Alive, and Feinberg Amusement Corporation added its support for the punitive expedition, Following the Flag in Mexico. See Katz, op. cit., pp. 324-6. William Randolph Hearst, an investor in Latin American mines and a huge land-owner in Mexico, was also fairly vexed with the Mexican revolution. Hearst's own studio produced Patria (1915), a fifteen-part serial whose plot 'depicted a Japanese-Mexican invasion of the United States and clearly was designed to capitalize on the nervousness many Americans felt over revolution in Mexico, Japanese involvement south of the Rio Grande, and United States-Japanese tensions'. Mora, op cit., p. 24. For Hearst's Mexican holdings, see Katz, op. cit., p. 157.
-
Mexican Cinema, Reflections of a Society, 1896-1980
, pp. 24
-
-
Mora1
-
38
-
-
0003619497
-
-
Ibid., pp. 23-4. Pancho Villa initially received favourable treatment in Hollywood. In 1914, he contracted with the Mutual Film Company for the latter to film news-reels of his battles with Huerta's troops. Mutual used the newsreels to produce a fictive narrative entitled The Life of General Villa (1914). In 1916, after Villa's raids in New Mexico, his Hollywood image changed dramatically. Eagle Films Manufacturing and Producing Company produced an anti-Villa tract entitled Villa Dead or Alive, and Feinberg Amusement Corporation added its support for the punitive expedition, Following the Flag in Mexico. See Katz, op. cit., pp. 324-6. William Randolph Hearst, an investor in Latin American mines and a huge land-owner in Mexico, was also fairly vexed with the Mexican revolution. Hearst's own studio produced Patria (1915), a fifteen-part serial whose plot 'depicted a Japanese-Mexican invasion of the United States and clearly was designed to capitalize on the nervousness many Americans felt over revolution in Mexico, Japanese involvement south of the Rio Grande, and United States-Japanese tensions'. Mora, op cit., p. 24. For Hearst's Mexican holdings, see Katz, op. cit., p. 157.
-
The Life and Times of Poncho Villa
, pp. 157
-
-
Katz1
-
42
-
-
0141491978
-
-
op. cit., p. 129
-
During the war, Hollywood's collaboration with Mexican filmmakers was managed through the US Office of the Coordinator for Inter-American Affairs (OCIAA) which 'undertook the modernization of the Mexican film studios in order to develop a more authentic source of wartime propaganda for Latin American audiences'. Seth Fein, 'From collaboration to containment: Hollywood and the international political economy of Mexican cinema after the second world war', in Hershfield and Maciel, op. cit., p. 129. The Mexican point man for Hollywood's penetration of Mexican cinema was Miguel Alemán, Camacho's Interior Secretary and the next president of Mexico (1946-52).
-
-
-
Hershfield1
Maciel2
-
43
-
-
0141715262
-
-
Personal email exchange with Luz Maria Cabral, 16 October 2001
-
Personal email exchange with Luz Maria Cabral, 16 October 2001.
-
-
-
-
44
-
-
0141491966
-
Interview with film maker Matilde Landeta
-
Winter
-
Isabel Arrendondo, 'Interview with film maker Matilde Landeta', Mexican Studies-Estudios Mexicanos (Vol. 18, Winter 2002), p. 192.
-
(2002)
Mexican Studies-estudios Mexicanos
, vol.18
, pp. 192
-
-
Arrendondo, I.1
-
45
-
-
0141603611
-
-
Hershfield and Maciel, op. cit.
-
Patricia Torres de San Martin maintains that both Landeta and her predecessor, the actress and director Adela Sequeyro, were children of the Mexican upper class. See Torres, 'Adela Sequeyro and Matilde Landeta: two pioneer women directors', in Hershfield and Maciel, op. cit., p. 38.
-
Adela Sequeyro and Matilde Landeta: Two Pioneer Women Directors
, pp. 38
-
-
Torres1
-
46
-
-
0141491973
-
The Blacks who freed Mexico
-
Summer
-
Ted Vincent, 'The Blacks who freed Mexico', The Journal of Negro History (Vol. LXXIX, no. 3, Summer 1994), p. 258; Cedric J. Robinson, Black Marxism (Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 2000), pp. 129-32; and Rafael Rebollar, 'La Raiz Olvidada', videotape (D. R. Producciones Trabuco S. C., 2001). Vincent cites Joel A. Rogers's biography of Guerrero, 'The Negro who freed Mexico', Negro World (4 January 1930) as the inspiration for his article.
-
(1994)
The Journal of Negro History
, vol.79
, Issue.3
, pp. 258
-
-
Vincent, T.1
-
47
-
-
0004180437
-
-
Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press
-
Ted Vincent, 'The Blacks who freed Mexico', The Journal of Negro History (Vol. LXXIX, no. 3, Summer 1994), p. 258; Cedric J. Robinson, Black Marxism (Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 2000), pp. 129-32; and Rafael Rebollar, 'La Raiz Olvidada', videotape (D. R. Producciones Trabuco S. C., 2001). Vincent cites Joel A. Rogers's biography of Guerrero, 'The Negro who freed Mexico', Negro World (4 January 1930) as the inspiration for his article.
-
(2000)
Black Marxism
, pp. 129-132
-
-
Robinson, C.J.1
-
48
-
-
0141603607
-
-
videotape (D. R. Producciones Trabuco S. C.)
-
Ted Vincent, 'The Blacks who freed Mexico', The Journal of Negro History (Vol. LXXIX, no. 3, Summer 1994), p. 258; Cedric J. Robinson, Black Marxism (Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 2000), pp. 129-32; and Rafael Rebollar, 'La Raiz Olvidada', videotape (D. R. Producciones Trabuco S. C., 2001). Vincent cites Joel A. Rogers's biography of Guerrero, 'The Negro who freed Mexico', Negro World (4 January 1930) as the inspiration for his article.
-
(2001)
La Raiz Olvidada
-
-
Rebollar, R.1
-
49
-
-
0141826608
-
The Negro who freed Mexico
-
4 January
-
Ted Vincent, 'The Blacks who freed Mexico', The Journal of Negro History (Vol. LXXIX, no. 3, Summer 1994), p. 258; Cedric J. Robinson, Black Marxism (Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 2000), pp. 129-32; and Rafael Rebollar, 'La Raiz Olvidada', videotape (D. R. Producciones Trabuco S. C., 2001). Vincent cites Joel A. Rogers's biography of Guerrero, 'The Negro who freed Mexico', Negro World (4 January 1930) as the inspiration for his article.
-
(1930)
Negro World
-
-
Rogers, J.A.1
-
50
-
-
0141826610
-
-
passim
-
See Vincent, op. cit., passim. Vincent relies on primary documents and a number of Mexican historical studies: Gonzalo Aguirre Beltrán, La Población Negra de México (Xalapa, 1991 (original 1946)); Lúcas Alaman, Historia de Méjico, desde los Primeros Movimientos que Prepararon su Independencia en el Año de 1808 Hasta La Epoca 2 Presente, 5 Vols (Mexico, 1849-52); Ubaldo Vargas Martínez, Morelos: siervo de la nation (Mexico, 1977); Patrick J. Carroll, Blacks in Colonial Veracruz: race, ethnicity, and regional development (Austin, University of Texas Press, 1991); Patricia Seed, 'Social dimensions of race: Mexico City, 1753', Hispanic American Historical Review (Vol. 62, no. 4, November 1982); and Patricia Seed, To Love, Honor, and Obey in Colonial Mexico: conflicts over marriage choice 1574-1821 (Stanford, CA, University of Stanford Press, 1988).
-
The Journal of Negro History
-
-
Vincent1
-
51
-
-
26744441757
-
-
Xalapa (original 1946)
-
See Vincent, op. cit., passim. Vincent relies on primary documents and a number of Mexican historical studies: Gonzalo Aguirre Beltrán, La Población Negra de México (Xalapa, 1991 (original 1946)); Lúcas Alaman, Historia de Méjico, desde los Primeros Movimientos que Prepararon su Independencia en el Año de 1808 Hasta La Epoca 2 Presente, 5 Vols (Mexico, 1849-52); Ubaldo Vargas Martínez, Morelos: siervo de la nation (Mexico, 1977); Patrick J. Carroll, Blacks in Colonial Veracruz: race, ethnicity, and regional development (Austin, University of Texas Press, 1991); Patricia Seed, 'Social dimensions of race: Mexico City, 1753', Hispanic American Historical Review (Vol. 62, no. 4, November 1982); and Patricia Seed, To Love, Honor, and Obey in Colonial Mexico: conflicts over marriage choice 1574-1821 (Stanford, CA, University of Stanford Press, 1988).
-
(1991)
La Población Negra de México
-
-
Beltrán, G.A.1
-
52
-
-
0141491976
-
-
See Vincent, op. cit., passim. Vincent relies on primary documents and a number of Mexican historical studies: Gonzalo Aguirre Beltrán, La Población Negra de México (Xalapa, 1991 (original 1946)); Lúcas Alaman, Historia de Méjico, desde los Primeros Movimientos que Prepararon su Independencia en el Año de 1808 Hasta La Epoca 2 Presente, 5 Vols (Mexico, 1849-52); Ubaldo Vargas Martínez, Morelos: siervo de la nation (Mexico, 1977); Patrick J. Carroll, Blacks in Colonial Veracruz: race, ethnicity, and regional development (Austin, University of Texas Press, 1991); Patricia Seed, 'Social dimensions of race: Mexico City, 1753', Hispanic American Historical Review (Vol. 62, no. 4, November 1982); and Patricia Seed, To Love, Honor, and Obey in Colonial Mexico: conflicts over marriage choice 1574-1821 (Stanford, CA, University of Stanford Press, 1988).
-
(1849)
Historia de Méjico, desde los Primeros Movimientos que Prepararon su Independencia en el Año de 1808 Hasta La Epoca 2 Presente
, vol.5
-
-
Alaman, L.1
-
53
-
-
26744469916
-
-
Mexico
-
See Vincent, op. cit., passim. Vincent relies on primary documents and a number of Mexican historical studies: Gonzalo Aguirre Beltrán, La Población Negra de México (Xalapa, 1991 (original 1946)); Lúcas Alaman, Historia de Méjico, desde los Primeros Movimientos que Prepararon su Independencia en el Año de 1808 Hasta La Epoca 2 Presente, 5 Vols (Mexico, 1849-52); Ubaldo Vargas Martínez, Morelos: siervo de la nation (Mexico, 1977); Patrick J. Carroll, Blacks in Colonial Veracruz: race, ethnicity, and regional development (Austin, University of Texas Press, 1991); Patricia Seed, 'Social dimensions of race: Mexico City, 1753', Hispanic American Historical Review (Vol. 62, no. 4, November 1982); and Patricia Seed, To Love, Honor, and Obey in Colonial Mexico: conflicts over marriage choice 1574-1821 (Stanford, CA, University of Stanford Press, 1988).
-
(1977)
Morelos: Siervo de la Nation
-
-
Martínez, U.V.1
-
54
-
-
0001938646
-
-
Austin, University of Texas Press
-
See Vincent, op. cit., passim. Vincent relies on primary documents and a number of Mexican historical studies: Gonzalo Aguirre Beltrán, La Población Negra de México (Xalapa, 1991 (original 1946)); Lúcas Alaman, Historia de Méjico, desde los Primeros Movimientos que Prepararon su Independencia en el Año de 1808 Hasta La Epoca 2 Presente, 5 Vols (Mexico, 1849-52); Ubaldo Vargas Martínez, Morelos: siervo de la nation (Mexico, 1977); Patrick J. Carroll, Blacks in Colonial Veracruz: race, ethnicity, and regional development (Austin, University of Texas Press, 1991); Patricia Seed, 'Social dimensions of race: Mexico City, 1753', Hispanic American Historical Review (Vol. 62, no. 4, November 1982); and Patricia Seed, To Love, Honor, and Obey in Colonial Mexico: conflicts over marriage choice 1574-1821 (Stanford, CA, University of Stanford Press, 1988).
-
(1991)
Blacks in Colonial Veracruz: Race, Ethnicity, and Regional Development
-
-
Carroll, P.J.1
-
55
-
-
0000760156
-
Social dimensions of race: Mexico City, 1753
-
November
-
See Vincent, op. cit., passim. Vincent relies on primary documents and a number of Mexican historical studies: Gonzalo Aguirre Beltrán, La Población Negra de México (Xalapa, 1991 (original 1946)); Lúcas Alaman, Historia de Méjico, desde los Primeros Movimientos que Prepararon su Independencia en el Año de 1808 Hasta La Epoca 2 Presente, 5 Vols (Mexico, 1849-52); Ubaldo Vargas Martínez, Morelos: siervo de la nation (Mexico, 1977); Patrick J. Carroll, Blacks in Colonial Veracruz: race, ethnicity, and regional development (Austin, University of Texas Press, 1991); Patricia Seed, 'Social dimensions of race: Mexico City, 1753', Hispanic American Historical Review (Vol. 62, no. 4, November 1982); and Patricia Seed, To Love, Honor, and Obey in Colonial Mexico: conflicts over marriage choice 1574-1821 (Stanford, CA, University of Stanford Press, 1988).
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(1982)
Hispanic American Historical Review
, vol.62
, Issue.4
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Seed, P.1
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56
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0003838426
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Stanford, CA, University of Stanford Press
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See Vincent, op. cit., passim. Vincent relies on primary documents and a number of Mexican historical studies: Gonzalo Aguirre Beltrán, La Población Negra de México (Xalapa, 1991 (original 1946)); Lúcas Alaman, Historia de Méjico, desde los Primeros Movimientos que Prepararon su Independencia en el Año de 1808 Hasta La Epoca 2 Presente, 5 Vols (Mexico, 1849-52); Ubaldo Vargas Martínez, Morelos: siervo de la nation (Mexico, 1977); Patrick J. Carroll, Blacks in Colonial Veracruz: race, ethnicity, and regional development (Austin, University of Texas Press, 1991); Patricia Seed, 'Social dimensions of race: Mexico City, 1753', Hispanic American Historical Review (Vol. 62, no. 4, November 1982); and Patricia Seed, To Love, Honor, and Obey in Colonial Mexico: conflicts over marriage choice 1574-1821 (Stanford, CA, University of Stanford Press, 1988).
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(1988)
To Love, Honor, and Obey in Colonial Mexico: Conflicts Over Marriage Choice 1574-1821
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Seed, P.1
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59
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26744465564
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Mexico, Editorial Patria
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Emilio García Riera and Fernando Macotela, La Guía del Cine Mexicano de la Pantalla Grande a la Televisión, 1919-1984 (Mexico, Editorial Patria, 1984), p. 210.
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(1984)
La Guía del Cine Mexicano de la Pantalla Grande a la Televisión, 1919-1984
, pp. 210
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García, E.R.1
Macotela, F.2
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62
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0141826603
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Rita, una sonrisa centenaria
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September/October
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Dani Francisco Tejera, 'Rita, una sonrisa centenaria', Cine (Vol. VII, no. 39, September/October, 2000). 〈http://www2.glauco.it/vitral/vitral39/cine.htm〉.
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(2000)
Cine
, vol.7
, Issue.39
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Tejera, D.F.1
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64
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26744475617
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Un Tipo de Cuidado
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January
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Maurício Peña, 'Un Tipo de Cuidado', SOMOS (January 2001), p. 33.
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(2001)
SOMOS
, pp. 33
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Peña, M.1
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65
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0141491971
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Three films from Mexico slated here
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1 October. The two other films were Rio Escondido and El General y la Señorita
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'Three films from Mexico slated here', Los Angeles Times (1 October 1950). The two other films were Rio Escondido and El General y la Señorita.
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(1950)
Los Angeles Times
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66
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0141491971
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Three films from Mexico slated here
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1 October. The two other films were Rio Escondido and El General y la Señorita
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I b i d.
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(1950)
Los Angeles Times
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67
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0141603603
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See Arrendondo, op. cit. It is not entirely clear whether Reira and Macotela approved of Landeta's vision since, following a disparaging comment on Angustias' black-face make-up, they concluded: 'pero lo que si resulto convincente fue la vehemencia feminista de la directora' (but what is clearly evident was the feminist passion of the director). Riera and Macotela, op. cit., p. 215.
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Mexican Studies-estudios Mexicanos
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Arrendondo1
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68
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0007134121
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See Arrendondo, op. cit. It is not entirely clear whether Reira and Macotela approved of Landeta's vision since, following a disparaging comment on Angustias' black-face make-up, they concluded: 'pero lo que si resulto convincente fue la vehemencia feminista de la directora' (but what is clearly evident was the feminist passion of the director). Riera and Macotela, op. cit., p. 215.
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Historia Documental del Cine Mexicano
, pp. 215
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Riera1
Macotela2
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70
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0141715251
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Francisco Rojas González: Exponente literario del nacionalismo mexicano
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Joseph Sommers, 'Francisco Rojas González: exponente literario del nacionalismo mexicano', Cuadernos de la Facultad de Filosofía, Letras y Ciencias (Vol. 36, 1966), p. 74.
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(1966)
Cuadernos de la Facultad de Filosofía, Letras y Ciencias
, vol.36
, pp. 74
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Sommers, J.1
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72
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0141491967
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op. cit.
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Riera, Historia Documental... op. cit., p. 67. In her interview, Landeta claimed that Rojas had explained to her that, as an anthropologist, he understood that historically, when women fell in love and married, they left their previous lives to start more selfless lives of obedience to their husbands. Landeta was unconvinced - she recounted that she and her brother had taken their mother's name as a tribute to her caring for them after their father abandoned the family.
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Historia Documental...
, pp. 67
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Riera1
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73
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0141491968
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op. cit., p. 93
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Landeta not too subtly critiqued Rojas by having the women of Angustias' village harass her, calling her 'marimacha' (lesbian) for refusing to accept a loveless marriage. Hershfield insists that the taunt is 'marimacho' and translates the term as 'tomboy' in her essay 'Race and ethnicity in the classical cinema', Hershfield and Maciel, op. cit., p. 93.
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Hershfield1
Maciel2
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74
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84896580208
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Landeta referenced the film to the literacy campaign in the late 1940s. President Alemán had initiated a national education programme which was dramatised in Río Escondido (1947), Mexico's most internationally celebrated film of the period. Fein contrasted Alemán's politics with Cárdenas's: 'If Cardenismo's populist mass-media project sought to mobilize (and incorporate) peasant and worker activism, Alemanismo's aimed to pacify proletarian and agrarian demands while expanding the state's corporatist controls.' Fein, op. cit., p. 126.
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(1947)
Río Escondido
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75
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0141715252
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op. cit., p. 126
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Landeta referenced the film to the literacy campaign in the late 1940s. President Alemán had initiated a national education programme which was dramatised in Río Escondido (1947), Mexico's most internationally celebrated film of the period. Fein contrasted Alemán's politics with Cárdenas's: 'If Cardenismo's populist mass-media project sought to mobilize (and incorporate) peasant and worker activism, Alemanismo's aimed to pacify proletarian and agrarian demands while expanding the state's corporatist controls.' Fein, op. cit., p. 126.
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Fein1
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76
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0141603599
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82ff
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Ibid., 82ff. For more on this issue see the article cited by Hershfield, Alan Knight, 'Racism, revolution, and indigenismo: Mexico, 1920-1940', in Richard Graham (ed.), The Idea of Race in Latin America, 1870-1940 (Austin, University of Texas Press, 1990), pp. 72-3.
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Río Escondido
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77
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0141491965
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Racism, revolution, and indigenismo: Mexico, 1920-1940
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Richard Graham (ed.), (Austin, University of Texas Press)
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Ibid., 82ff. For more on this issue see the article cited by Hershfield, Alan Knight, 'Racism, revolution, and indigenismo: Mexico, 1920-1940', in Richard Graham (ed.), The Idea of Race in Latin America, 1870-1940 (Austin, University of Texas Press, 1990), pp. 72-3.
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(1990)
The Idea of Race in Latin America, 1870-1940
, pp. 72-73
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Hershfield, A.K.1
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