Una gramática del norte: filmar desde Salta. : Micropolíticas del espacio y oralidad en el cine de Lucrecia Martel
In this article, I will observe two omnipresent mechanisms in the cinematography of Lucrecia Martel. In the first place, I will analyze in the film La ciénaga (2001) a political urgency to inquire into microspaces, through an obsessive gaze, a mechanism that I consider runs through her project from...
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Formato: | Online |
Lenguaje: | spa |
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Centro Interdisciplinario de Literatura Hispanoamericana (CILHA)
2023
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Acceso en línea: | https://revistas.uncu.edu.ar/ojs3/index.php/cilha/article/view/6522 |
Sumario: | In this article, I will observe two omnipresent mechanisms in the cinematography of Lucrecia Martel. In the first place, I will analyze in the film La ciénaga (2001) a political urgency to inquire into microspaces, through an obsessive gaze, a mechanism that I consider runs through her project from one extreme to the other. Secondly, in the short film Nueva Argirópolis (2010) I will analyze what I call an oral cinema, that is, a cinema with a total pre-eminence of orality and voice. Martel postulates in her films a politics of voices, which she has specifically located as "a grammar from the north", clearly justifying the placement of “speech from Salta against the devaluation of the word". As I will expand on in this article, I propose that this politics of voices is the most radical mechanism for breaking with a previous cinema, and, at the same time, it is the operation that definitively turns Martel's cinema into a project that brings with it a decentralizing gesture. in the Argentine cultural field. In this sense, there is a key political decision that runs through her films as a general operating framework and that I will analyze in detail: filming from Salta. I believe that Martel's film project designs new provincial routes for Argentine cinema and works from exceptionally investigated spaces and perspectives within a national film tradition. In addition, in her “filming from Salta” she investigates localized conflicts that had never been observed from a cinematographic perspective, without settling for simplifying visions of certain cartographies. |
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