Latin America in Focus

Q2 Arts and Humanities
German A. Duarte, J. Battin
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

A key distinction of Review of International American Studies is its commitment to the notion that the Americas are a hemispheric and transoceanic communicating vessel. This angle provides a unique path to de-center the American Studies discipline, which has become tantamount to studies of the United States. This angle also expands the discipline beyond its traditional literary roots, inviting critical investigations into other forms of communicative media, such as cinema, television, and photography. Informed and inspired by this conceptualization of the discipline, this issue of RIAS is composed of several pieces specifically focused on Latin America, each of which employs a unique interpretive approach of visual media to, collectively and comprehensively, articulate how this multilayered cultural landscape manifests in our contemporary social imaginary. The arbitrary delineation of the globe through the notion of ‘the western world’ has, seemingly, transformed the Latin American continent a no man’s land. In its vast extension, this part of the planet seems condemned to exist between two worlds. Despite being part of the western hemisphere, and despite its deep Catholic tradition, this vast region is surprisingly excluded as a member of ‘the west.’ Yet, it was neither placed in ‘the east,’ nor on the other side of the wall, when the world was politically, culturally, and economically divided by the Iron Curtain. This land’s perpetual homelessness might be due to its consistent political instability, to the weakness of some of its democracies, or even its colonial past, one that bears no relation to the Commonwealth of Britain, a belonging that placed Australia in the topos of the West. These reasons, in addition to others, have fostered an understanding of Latin America as being generally alien to the ‘western world.’ Being a no man’s land, deprived of a hemisphere, and broadly unintelligible by the general imaginary of the western cultural industry, this continent, populated by almost 700-million people, was traditionally subjected to stereotypes formulated during the twentieth century, and that remained unchangeable in this new millennium. Latin America has become, for the global imaginary, a place of military juntas, a vast lowland displaying desertic features, a tropical yet savage jungle, a poverty-stricken favela, and a land fought over by romantic revolutionarios. Certainly, the question remains if the obsolete model ‘western world,’ the also obsolete ‘third world,’ or ‘periphery,’ and even the in vogue ‘global south’ would be able to embrace and reproduce a closer image of this heterogenous and vast continent, and by extension if this generalization is able to denote a set of multiple series of social diversities. We doubt it. This doubt encouraged us to gather diverse scholars from diverse academic disciplines to contribute to this issue of Review of International American Studies. And this doubt, which was at a first glance only intuitive, brough us to avoid the topic of identity and representation as the main theme for this journal’s issue. Our initial plan was to structure the series of contributions on some problematics relating to the photographic medium, a medium that is widely regarded as exerting an objective representation of reality, yet also places the pictorial representation on an undetermined semiotic field. The choice of photography was also a choice of intuition that we quickly abandoned since, in our twenty-first century mediascape, photography represents only one element of a fast and global visual stream that shapes and refashions the collective imaginary of the Latin American continent. Thus, we expanded our scope to include other media such as films, paintings, and any visual-oriented human expression that could provide insights on the complex and chaotic mechanism that formulates and constructs the imaginary on the turbulent entity that we call society. 
关注拉丁美洲
《国际美国研究评论》的一个关键特点是它坚持美洲是一个半球和跨洋交流的船只的观点。这一视角为美国研究学科去中心化提供了一条独特的路径,使其成为无异于研究美国的学科。这个角度也扩展了这门学科超越其传统的文学根源,邀请批判性调查到其他形式的传播媒体,如电影,电视和摄影。受这一学科概念化的启发,本期《RIAS》由几篇特别关注拉丁美洲的文章组成,每一篇都采用了独特的视觉媒体解释方法,集体和全面地阐明了这种多层次的文化景观如何在我们当代的社会想象中表现出来。通过“西方世界”的概念对全球的任意描绘,似乎已经把拉丁美洲大陆变成了一个无人区。在其广阔的范围内,地球的这一部分似乎注定要存在于两个世界之间。尽管是西半球的一部分,尽管有着深厚的天主教传统,但令人惊讶的是,这个广阔的地区被排除在“西方”之外。然而,当世界在政治、文化和经济上被铁幕分割时,它既没有被置于“东方”,也没有被置于墙的另一边。这片土地永久的无家可归可能是由于其持续的政治不稳定,一些民主制度的薄弱,甚至是它的殖民历史,这与英联邦没有任何关系,这一归属将澳大利亚置于西方的主题中。这些原因,再加上其他原因,促使人们认为拉丁美洲与“西方世界”格格不入。作为一片无人区,被剥夺了一个半球,并且基本上无法被西方文化工业的一般想象所理解,这个拥有近7亿人口的大陆,传统上受制于20世纪形成的刻板印象,在这个新的千年中仍然没有改变。在全球的想象中,拉丁美洲已经变成了一个军事军政府的地方,一个具有沙漠特征的广阔低地,一个热带但野蛮的丛林,一个贫困的贫民窟,一个浪漫革命者争夺的土地。当然,问题仍然存在,过时的“西方世界”模式,同样过时的“第三世界”或“外围”,甚至流行的“全球南方”是否能够接受并再现这个异质而广阔的大陆的更接近的形象,并且通过推广,这种概括是否能够表示一系列的社会多样性。我们对此表示怀疑。这种怀疑促使我们聚集了来自不同学科的不同学者,为本期《国际美国研究评论》撰稿。这种怀疑,乍一看只是直觉,使我们避免了身份和代表性的话题,作为这期杂志的主题。我们最初的计划是构建一系列与摄影媒介有关的问题的贡献,这种媒介被广泛认为是对现实的客观表现,但也将图像表现置于一个不确定的符号学领域。选择摄影也是一种直觉的选择,我们很快就放弃了,因为在我们21世纪的媒体景观中,摄影只代表了快速和全球视觉流的一个元素,它塑造和重塑了拉丁美洲大陆的集体想象。因此,我们扩大了研究范围,包括其他媒体,如电影、绘画和任何以视觉为导向的人类表达,这些媒体可以提供对复杂而混乱的机制的见解,这些机制在我们称之为社会的动荡实体上形成和构建想象。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Review of International American Studies
Review of International American Studies Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
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