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Pedro AlmÓdovar may have helped put queer Iberian cinema on the
map, but there are also multitudes of other LGBTQ filmmakers from
Catalonia, Portugal, Castile, Galicia, and the Basque Country who
have made the Peninsula one of the world's most vital sources for
queer film. Together, they have produced a cinema whose expressions
of queer desire have challenged the region's conservative religious
and family values, while intervening in vital debates about
politics, history, and nation. Â Iberian Queer Cinema is a
unique collection that offers in-depth analyses of fifteen
different films, each by a different director, produced in the
region over the past fifty years, from Narciso IbÃÑez Serrador's
La residencia (The House That Screamed, 1970) to JoÃo Pedro
Rodrigues' O ornitÓlogo (The Ornithologist, 2016). Together, they
show how queer Iberian cinema has responded to historical traumas
ranging from the AIDS crisis to the repressive and homophobic
Franco regime. Yet they also explore how these films gesture
towards a more fluid understanding of sexuality, gender, and
national identity. This book will thus give readers a new
appreciation for both the cultural diversity of Iberia and the
richness of its moving and thought-provoking queer cinema.
Pedro AlmOdovar may have helped put queer Iberian cinema on the
map, but there are also multitudes of other LGBTQ filmmakers from
Catalonia, Portugal, Castile, Galicia, and the Basque Country who
have made the Peninsula one of the world's most vital sources for
queer film. Together, they have produced a cinema whose expressions
of queer desire have challenged the region's conservative religious
and family values, while intervening in vital debates about
politics, history, and nation. Iberian Queer Cinema is a unique
collection that offers in-depth analyses of fifteen different
films, each by a different director, produced in the region over
the past fifty years, from Narciso IbANez Serrador's La residencia
(The House That Screamed, 1970) to JoAo Pedro Rodrigues' O
ornitOlogo (The Ornithologist, 2016). Together, they show how queer
Iberian cinema has responded to historical traumas ranging from the
AIDS crisis to the repressive and homophobic Franco regime. Yet
they also explore how these films gesture towards a more fluid
understanding of sexuality, gender, and national identity. This
book will thus give readers a new appreciation for both the
cultural diversity of Iberia and the richness of its moving and
thought-provoking queer cinema.
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