Margarita, the Big Bad Wolf, and the film censor: film, feminism, and dictatorial repression in Spain Articles
Overview
published in
- Feminist Media Studies Journal
publication date
- June 2024
start page
- 191
end page
- 206
issue
- 2
volume
- 24
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
- 1468-0777
Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)
- 1471-5902
abstract
- This article studies the themes, techniques, and aesthetics of some of the student films that the Spanish filmmaker Cecilia Bartolomé made at the Escuela Oficial de Cinematografía (Official Film School, EOC) during the 1960s, framing them within the cinematographic currents and the cultural expressions of feminism in the national and international sphere of the time. Through historical analysis, archival research, and interviews, the above-mentioned aspects will be related to the filmmaker’s vicissitudes with censorship, examining how they marked her formative years and the beginning of her professional career until the mid-1970s, when the feature film project intended to launch her professionally was curtailed. Ultimately, I seek to explore the way in which Bartolomé experimented with narrative techniques and cinematographic language while articulating a feminist film discourse that incurred the censors’ wrath, making it impossible for her to work until the coming of democracy in Spain.
Classification
subjects
- Information Science
keywords
- cecilia bartolomé; věra chytilová; francoism; feminism; film censorship