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34. The Spaces of Home in Chicano and Latino Representations of the San Diego–Tijuana Borderlands (1968–2002)
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations ix
- Preface xiii
- Acknowledgments xv
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Definitions and Debates
- Introduction 12
- 1. Looking for Alternatives: Notes on Chicano Art, 1960–1990 19
- 2. Con Safo (C/S) Artists: A Contingency Factor 30
- 3. El Arte del Chicano: “The Spirit of the Experience” 32
- 4. Notes on an Aesthetic Alternative 35
- 5. A Critical Perspective on the State of Chicano Art 37
- 6. Response: Another Opinion on the State of Chicano Art 45
- 7. Post-Chicano 54
- 8. The New Chicano Movement 58
- 9. Post-movimiento: The Contemporary (Re)Generation of Chicana/o Art 66
- Further Reading 72
-
Part II. Cultural Reclamation and Vernacular Traditions
- Introduction 74
- 10. The Politics of Popular Art 81
- 11. Rasquachismo: A Chicano Sensibility 85
- 12. Domesticana: The Sensibility of Chicana Rasquachismo 91
- 13. Chicano Humor in Art: For Whom the Taco Bell Tolls 100
- 14. Points of Convergence: The Iconography of the Chicano Poster 104
- 15. Graffiti Is Art: Any Drawn Line That Speaks about Identity, Dignity, and Unity . . . That Line Is Art 117
- 16. Inventing Tradition, Negotiating Modernism: Chicano/a Art and the Pre-Columbian Past 123
- 17. Negotiated Frontiers: Contemporary Chicano Photography 135
- 18. Deus ex Machina: Tradition, Technology, and the Chicanafuturist Art of Marion C. Martinez 146
- 19. Celia Alvarez Muñoz: “Civic Studies” 165
- Further Reading 174
-
Part III. Bodily Aesthetics and Iconologies
- Introduction 176
- 20. Mel Casas: Redefining America 183
- 21. Drawing Offensive/Offensive Drawing: Toward a Theory of Mariconógraphy 194
- 22. The Pachuco’s Flayed Hide: Mobility, Identity, and Buenas Garras 208
- 23. Writing on the Social Body: Dresses and Body Ornamentation in Contemporary Chicana Art 219
- 24. Ojo de la Diosa: Becoming Divine in Delilah Montoya’s Photography 237
- 25. Art Comes for the Archbishop: The Semiotics of Contemporary Chicana Feminism and the Work of Alma López 250
- Further Reading 263
-
Part IV. Public Practices and Enacted Landscapes
- Introduction 266
- 26. The Enacted Environment of East Los Angeles 271
- 27. Space, Power, and Youth Culture: Mexican American Graffiti and Chicano Murals in East Los Angeles, 1972–1978 278
- 28. Pseudographic Cinema: Asco’s No-Movies 292
- 29. Whose Monument Where? Public Art in a Many-Cultured Society 304
- 30. La Memoria de Nuestra Tierra: Colorado 310
- 31. The Donkey Cart Caper: Some Thoughts on Socially Conscious Art in Antisocial Public Space 314
- 32. Public Audit: An Interview with Elizabeth Sisco, Louis Hock, and David Avalos 319
- Further Reading 331
-
Part V. Border Visions and Immigration Politics
- Introduction 334
- 33. Border Arte: Nepantla, el Lugar de la Frontera 341
- 34. The Spaces of Home in Chicano and Latino Representations of the San Diego–Tijuana Borderlands (1968–2002) 351
- 35. Straddling la otra frontera: Inserting MiChicana/o Visual Culture into Chicana/o Art History 374
- 36. Borders, Border Crossing, and Political Art in North Carolina 394
- 37. Excerpts from Codex Espangliensis: From Columbus to the Border Patrol 402
- 38. 187 Reasons Why Mexicanos Can’t Cross the Border (Remix) 406
- Further Reading 410
-
Part VI. Institutional Frameworks and Critical Reception
- Introduction 412
- 39. Los Four 417
- 40. MARCH to an Aesthetic of Revolution 420
- 41. Resisting Modernism: Chicano Art: Retro Progressive or Progressive Retro? 423
- 42. Our America at the Smithsonian 427
- 43. Alex Rivera, Philip Kennicott Debate Washington Post Review of Our America 430
- 44. What Do We Mean When We Talk about “Latino Art”? 434
- 45. Chicano Art: Looking Backward 436
- 46. Readers’ Forum Letter to the Editor in Response to Shifra Goldman’s Exhibition Review 440
- 47. Readers’ Forum Response to Judithe Hernández’s Letter to the Editor 442
- 48. “All Roads Lead to East L.A.,” Goez Art Studios and Gallery 444
- 49. From CARA to CACA: The Multiple Anatomies of Chicano/a Art at the Turn of the New Century 455
- 50. On Museum Row: Aesthetics and the Politics of Exhibition 470
- 51. Strangeways Here We Come 484
- Further Reading 495
- Glossary 497
- Contributors 501
- Index 509
- Acknowledgment of Copyrights 531
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations ix
- Preface xiii
- Acknowledgments xv
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Definitions and Debates
- Introduction 12
- 1. Looking for Alternatives: Notes on Chicano Art, 1960–1990 19
- 2. Con Safo (C/S) Artists: A Contingency Factor 30
- 3. El Arte del Chicano: “The Spirit of the Experience” 32
- 4. Notes on an Aesthetic Alternative 35
- 5. A Critical Perspective on the State of Chicano Art 37
- 6. Response: Another Opinion on the State of Chicano Art 45
- 7. Post-Chicano 54
- 8. The New Chicano Movement 58
- 9. Post-movimiento: The Contemporary (Re)Generation of Chicana/o Art 66
- Further Reading 72
-
Part II. Cultural Reclamation and Vernacular Traditions
- Introduction 74
- 10. The Politics of Popular Art 81
- 11. Rasquachismo: A Chicano Sensibility 85
- 12. Domesticana: The Sensibility of Chicana Rasquachismo 91
- 13. Chicano Humor in Art: For Whom the Taco Bell Tolls 100
- 14. Points of Convergence: The Iconography of the Chicano Poster 104
- 15. Graffiti Is Art: Any Drawn Line That Speaks about Identity, Dignity, and Unity . . . That Line Is Art 117
- 16. Inventing Tradition, Negotiating Modernism: Chicano/a Art and the Pre-Columbian Past 123
- 17. Negotiated Frontiers: Contemporary Chicano Photography 135
- 18. Deus ex Machina: Tradition, Technology, and the Chicanafuturist Art of Marion C. Martinez 146
- 19. Celia Alvarez Muñoz: “Civic Studies” 165
- Further Reading 174
-
Part III. Bodily Aesthetics and Iconologies
- Introduction 176
- 20. Mel Casas: Redefining America 183
- 21. Drawing Offensive/Offensive Drawing: Toward a Theory of Mariconógraphy 194
- 22. The Pachuco’s Flayed Hide: Mobility, Identity, and Buenas Garras 208
- 23. Writing on the Social Body: Dresses and Body Ornamentation in Contemporary Chicana Art 219
- 24. Ojo de la Diosa: Becoming Divine in Delilah Montoya’s Photography 237
- 25. Art Comes for the Archbishop: The Semiotics of Contemporary Chicana Feminism and the Work of Alma López 250
- Further Reading 263
-
Part IV. Public Practices and Enacted Landscapes
- Introduction 266
- 26. The Enacted Environment of East Los Angeles 271
- 27. Space, Power, and Youth Culture: Mexican American Graffiti and Chicano Murals in East Los Angeles, 1972–1978 278
- 28. Pseudographic Cinema: Asco’s No-Movies 292
- 29. Whose Monument Where? Public Art in a Many-Cultured Society 304
- 30. La Memoria de Nuestra Tierra: Colorado 310
- 31. The Donkey Cart Caper: Some Thoughts on Socially Conscious Art in Antisocial Public Space 314
- 32. Public Audit: An Interview with Elizabeth Sisco, Louis Hock, and David Avalos 319
- Further Reading 331
-
Part V. Border Visions and Immigration Politics
- Introduction 334
- 33. Border Arte: Nepantla, el Lugar de la Frontera 341
- 34. The Spaces of Home in Chicano and Latino Representations of the San Diego–Tijuana Borderlands (1968–2002) 351
- 35. Straddling la otra frontera: Inserting MiChicana/o Visual Culture into Chicana/o Art History 374
- 36. Borders, Border Crossing, and Political Art in North Carolina 394
- 37. Excerpts from Codex Espangliensis: From Columbus to the Border Patrol 402
- 38. 187 Reasons Why Mexicanos Can’t Cross the Border (Remix) 406
- Further Reading 410
-
Part VI. Institutional Frameworks and Critical Reception
- Introduction 412
- 39. Los Four 417
- 40. MARCH to an Aesthetic of Revolution 420
- 41. Resisting Modernism: Chicano Art: Retro Progressive or Progressive Retro? 423
- 42. Our America at the Smithsonian 427
- 43. Alex Rivera, Philip Kennicott Debate Washington Post Review of Our America 430
- 44. What Do We Mean When We Talk about “Latino Art”? 434
- 45. Chicano Art: Looking Backward 436
- 46. Readers’ Forum Letter to the Editor in Response to Shifra Goldman’s Exhibition Review 440
- 47. Readers’ Forum Response to Judithe Hernández’s Letter to the Editor 442
- 48. “All Roads Lead to East L.A.,” Goez Art Studios and Gallery 444
- 49. From CARA to CACA: The Multiple Anatomies of Chicano/a Art at the Turn of the New Century 455
- 50. On Museum Row: Aesthetics and the Politics of Exhibition 470
- 51. Strangeways Here We Come 484
- Further Reading 495
- Glossary 497
- Contributors 501
- Index 509
- Acknowledgment of Copyrights 531