Description

Book Synopsis
In Mock Classicism Nilo Couret presents an alternate history of Latin American cinema that traces the popularity and cultural significance of film comedies as responses to modernization and the forerunners to a more explicitly political New Latin American Cinema of the 1960s. By examining the linguistic play of comedians such as Cantinflas, Oscarito and Grande Otelo, Niní Marshall, and Luis Sandrini, the author demonstrates aspects of Latin American comedy that operate via embodiment on one hand and spatiotemporal emplacement on the other. Taken together, these parallel examples of comedic practice demonstrate how Latin American film comedies produce a critically proximate spectator who is capable of perceiving and organizing space and time differently. Combining close readings of films, archival research, film theory, and Latin American history, Mock Classicism rethinks classicism as a discourse that mediates and renders the world and argues that Latin American cinema became classical in distinct ways from Hollywood.

Table of Contents
List of Illustrations ix
Acknowledgments xi

Introduction 1
1. Cantinflismo and Relajo’s Peripheral Vision 22
2. The Call of the Screen: Niní Marshall and the Radiophonic Stardom of Argentine Cinema 68
3. Timing Is Everything: Sandrini’s Stutter and the Representability of Time 111
4. Fictions of the Real: The Currency of the Brazilian Chanchada 153
5. Comedy Circulates Circuitously: Toward an Odographic Film History of Latin America 192

Notes 235
Selected Bibliography 263
Index 273

Mock Classicism

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    A Paperback by Nilo Couret

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      Publisher: University of California Press
      Publication Date: 3/16/2018 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780520296855, 978-0520296855
      ISBN10: 0520296850

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In Mock Classicism Nilo Couret presents an alternate history of Latin American cinema that traces the popularity and cultural significance of film comedies as responses to modernization and the forerunners to a more explicitly political New Latin American Cinema of the 1960s. By examining the linguistic play of comedians such as Cantinflas, Oscarito and Grande Otelo, Niní Marshall, and Luis Sandrini, the author demonstrates aspects of Latin American comedy that operate via embodiment on one hand and spatiotemporal emplacement on the other. Taken together, these parallel examples of comedic practice demonstrate how Latin American film comedies produce a critically proximate spectator who is capable of perceiving and organizing space and time differently. Combining close readings of films, archival research, film theory, and Latin American history, Mock Classicism rethinks classicism as a discourse that mediates and renders the world and argues that Latin American cinema became classical in distinct ways from Hollywood.

      Table of Contents
      List of Illustrations ix
      Acknowledgments xi

      Introduction 1
      1. Cantinflismo and Relajo’s Peripheral Vision 22
      2. The Call of the Screen: Niní Marshall and the Radiophonic Stardom of Argentine Cinema 68
      3. Timing Is Everything: Sandrini’s Stutter and the Representability of Time 111
      4. Fictions of the Real: The Currency of the Brazilian Chanchada 153
      5. Comedy Circulates Circuitously: Toward an Odographic Film History of Latin America 192

      Notes 235
      Selected Bibliography 263
      Index 273

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