Amores Perros

Amores Perros

Amores Perros

Amores Perros

Paperback(2003)

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Overview

Amores Perros (2000) speaks to an international audience while never oversimplifying its local culture. This study of this film opens up that culture, revealing the film's relationship to television soap operas, pop music and contemporary debates about what it means to be Mexican.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780851709734
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 10/28/2003
Series: BFI Film Classics
Edition description: 2003
Pages: 96
Product dimensions: 5.30(w) x 7.40(h) x 0.40(d)

About the Author

Paul Julian Smith is the Professor of Spanish at the University of Cambridge, UK and author of Contemporary Spanish Culture: TV, Fashion, Art and Film (2003). He is a regular contributor to Sight and Sound.

Table of Contents

Myth and History in Transitions From Nondemocratic Rule.- Authorizing Reform By Uncovering the Past.- Leninist Mythology and Reform.- Assessing the Genesis of Stalinism.- Societal Conquest and the Decay of the Center.- Myth, History, and Separatism in the Periphery.- History and Myth in the Post-Soviet Space.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"This is an exemplary work of social science that elegantly and effortlessly marries theory to extensive empirical research. Thomas Sherlock shows, with reference to a wealth of evidence, just how official discourse and myths sustained the Soviet order, just how their delegitimation hastened the USSR's end, and just how their partial revival have helped consolidate Vladimir Putin's rule. Sherlock challenges institutionalist and rational choice orthodoxies and shows constructivists how to do constructivism right." - Alexander J. Motyl, Professor of Political Science, Rutgers University-Newark"This book can be read as a history of emerging democracy, a historiographical examination, and as a case study drawing from, and contributing to, totalitarian theory specifically and political theory in general. Consequently, it should be of interest to diverse groups beyond the fields of Russian politics and regional studies. Historians of the period would be well served by reading this book, in addition to anyone interested in democratisation and comparative politics. The fact that Sherlock's clear prose is comparatively free of jargon will be a relief for specialists and non-specialists alike." - Michael Westrate, University of Notre Dame

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