Academic literature on the topic 'Narcocinema'
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Journal articles on the topic "Narcocinema"
Vincenot, Emmanuel. "Narcocine : la descente aux enfers du cinéma populaire mexicain." L’Ordinaire des Amériques, no. 213 (May 31, 2010): 31–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/orda.2409.
Full textPalaversich, Diana. "O panorama das Drogas no México: da margem da sociedade ao centro da cultura." Sociologias 15, no. 34 (December 2013): 26–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s1517-45222013000300003.
Full textPannetier Leboeuf, Gabrielle. "Necropolíticas neoliberales y narcotráfico en el cine mexicano de serie B: un estudio de caso de El juego final (2014), de Oscar López." Arte y Políticas de Identidad 26 (June 30, 2022): 103–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.6018/reapi.530021.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Narcocinema"
Pannetier, Leboeuf Gabrielle. "Narcocultura audiovisual, género y capitalismo gore en México : un estudio del narcocine videohome y de sus representaciones femeninas." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Sorbonne université, 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024SORUL125.
Full textThis thesis examines the narrative and formal representations of female characters in Mexican and Mexican American videohome narcocinema, a low-budget cinema that depicts the violent activities of drug cartels in Mexico. Drawing from an analysis of a corpus of 175 films produced between 2007 and 2024, the research explores the intricate relationships between female characters, violence, conspicuous consumption, and heteronormative sexuality. Through an interdisciplinary approach, the female representations are critically analyzed within the broader context of heteropatriarchal narcoculture and neoliberalism in which these films are framed.The study is structured into three main sections. The first section addresses the socio-historical context of drug trafficking and narco-violence in Mexico. Drug trafficking has deeply entrenched roots in certain regions of Mexico, and President Felipe Calderón's attempts to diminish its influence by initiating a war on drugs in 2006 has only resulted in intensified violence across the country. This escalation has produced both an increase and diversification of female involvement in drug-related criminal activities as well as a rise in violence against women and “feminicide”. The second section of the study provides an in-depth characterization of narcoculture, examining its underlying value system and main cultural productions, alongside a detailed exploration of videohome narcocinema. I argue that this relatively overlooked film industry plays a crucial role in shaping a collective memory of drug trafficking through popular culture, operating within the framework of gore capitalism. In the third section, which focusses on women and their representations in narcocinema, we discuss the limited participation of women in creative roles within the narcocinema industry, a factor that significantly influences how gender is represented on screen. The study identifies two broad categories of female characters: first, those who are subordinated to hegemonic narco-masculinity, which reinforce traditional stereotypes and social choreographies of gender within narcoculture, and second, those whose partial empowerment―the limits of which we explain through a historical analysis―offers alternative models of femininity.The analysis highlights that the main female characters subordinated to male traffickers include victims of male narco-violence, who suffer the consequences of gendered necropolitics, as well as trophy women, who are sexually objectified and used by drug traffickers as symbols of status. The empowered characters, on the other hand, predominantly consist of female cartel bosses, hired assassins or sicarias, avengers, and buchonas. The former resort to violence as a means of necro-empowerment, socioeconomic mobility, or revenge, while the buchonas leverage their erotic capital to gain access to material wealth. Nevertheless, the study observes that while these active female figures destabilize traditional gender roles, their empowerment remains confined within the constraints of the heteropatriarchal and neoliberal system.The thesis posits that videohome narcocinema, by depicting the sex-gender power apparatus inherent in narcoculture and highlighting its ruptures, serves as a reflection of the tensions and potential shifts in the relationships between gender, power, and violence in contemporary Mexico
Book chapters on the topic "Narcocinema"
Avila, Jacqueline. "‘No Hay Nada Que Celebrar’: Music, Migration, and Violence in Luis Estrada’s El Infierno (2010)." In When Music Takes Over in Film, 181–99. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-89155-8_10.
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