Constructions of femininity in Latin/o American comics : redefining womanhood via the male-authored comic

This dissertation examines constructions of femininity in three male-authored Latin/o American comics: Gabriel Vargas' La Familia Burrón (Mexico, 1948-2009), Quino's Mafalda (Argentina, 1964-1973), and Love and Rockets (Los Bros. Hernandez, 1981-1996; 2000-present). After first establishin...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tullis, Brittany Nicole
Other Authors: Merino, Ana, 1971-
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Iowa 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/4777
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5293&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-52932019-11-09T09:26:26Z Constructions of femininity in Latin/o American comics : redefining womanhood via the male-authored comic Tullis, Brittany Nicole This dissertation examines constructions of femininity in three male-authored Latin/o American comics: Gabriel Vargas' La Familia Burrón (Mexico, 1948-2009), Quino's Mafalda (Argentina, 1964-1973), and Love and Rockets (Los Bros. Hernandez, 1981-1996; 2000-present). After first establishing an analytical context from which to explore these works, discussing contemporary trends in national comics production as well as the ways in which femininity has been prescriptively constructed in each particular time and place, I then analyze the ways in which each author questions, challenges, and/or completely reconstructs their own version of "graphic femininity." As the following chapters will show, each articulation of femininity as constructed within the three serial comics under examination here takes different forms in each comic under analysis; while female characters in one title might embody a socially idealized model of femininity such as the "angel in the house," or the cult of "true womanhood", characters in other comics (or even within the same title) might play inverse roles, defying the mandates of the role assigned to them by contemporary society and ideological institutions such as compulsory heterosexuality or patriarchal power. A variety of models of feminine behavior and subjectivity are present in the panels of these comics, but in contrast with other contemporary constructions of femininity in cultural texts, products and sociopolitical discourse, they are presented critically rather than prescriptively, depicted in ways that disrupt the limits of femininity as it has traditionally been construed and, in some cases, offer visions of alternative, liberating paths. 2014-05-01T07:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/4777 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5293&context=etd Copyright © 2014 Brittany Nicole Tullis Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaMerino, Ana, 1971- comics domesticity femininity gender Latin American Latino Spanish and Portuguese Language and Literature
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic comics
domesticity
femininity
gender
Latin American
Latino
Spanish and Portuguese Language and Literature
spellingShingle comics
domesticity
femininity
gender
Latin American
Latino
Spanish and Portuguese Language and Literature
Tullis, Brittany Nicole
Constructions of femininity in Latin/o American comics : redefining womanhood via the male-authored comic
description This dissertation examines constructions of femininity in three male-authored Latin/o American comics: Gabriel Vargas' La Familia Burrón (Mexico, 1948-2009), Quino's Mafalda (Argentina, 1964-1973), and Love and Rockets (Los Bros. Hernandez, 1981-1996; 2000-present). After first establishing an analytical context from which to explore these works, discussing contemporary trends in national comics production as well as the ways in which femininity has been prescriptively constructed in each particular time and place, I then analyze the ways in which each author questions, challenges, and/or completely reconstructs their own version of "graphic femininity." As the following chapters will show, each articulation of femininity as constructed within the three serial comics under examination here takes different forms in each comic under analysis; while female characters in one title might embody a socially idealized model of femininity such as the "angel in the house," or the cult of "true womanhood", characters in other comics (or even within the same title) might play inverse roles, defying the mandates of the role assigned to them by contemporary society and ideological institutions such as compulsory heterosexuality or patriarchal power. A variety of models of feminine behavior and subjectivity are present in the panels of these comics, but in contrast with other contemporary constructions of femininity in cultural texts, products and sociopolitical discourse, they are presented critically rather than prescriptively, depicted in ways that disrupt the limits of femininity as it has traditionally been construed and, in some cases, offer visions of alternative, liberating paths.
author2 Merino, Ana, 1971-
author_facet Merino, Ana, 1971-
Tullis, Brittany Nicole
author Tullis, Brittany Nicole
author_sort Tullis, Brittany Nicole
title Constructions of femininity in Latin/o American comics : redefining womanhood via the male-authored comic
title_short Constructions of femininity in Latin/o American comics : redefining womanhood via the male-authored comic
title_full Constructions of femininity in Latin/o American comics : redefining womanhood via the male-authored comic
title_fullStr Constructions of femininity in Latin/o American comics : redefining womanhood via the male-authored comic
title_full_unstemmed Constructions of femininity in Latin/o American comics : redefining womanhood via the male-authored comic
title_sort constructions of femininity in latin/o american comics : redefining womanhood via the male-authored comic
publisher University of Iowa
publishDate 2014
url https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/4777
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5293&context=etd
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