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Branding Brazil: Transforming Citizenship on Screen

Autor Leslie L. Marsh
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 mai 2021 – vârsta ani
Branding Brazil examines a panorama of contemporary cultural productions including film, television, photography, and alternative media to explore the transformation of citizenship in Brazil from 2003 to 2014. A utopian impulse drove the reproduction of Brazilian cultural identity for local and global consumption; cultural production sought social and economic profits, especially greater inclusion of previously marginalized people and places. Marsh asserts that three communicative strategies from branding–promising progress, cultivating buy-in, and resolving contradictions–are the most salient and recurrent practices of nation branding during this historic period. More recent political crises can be understood partly in terms of backlash against marked social and political changes introduced during the branding period. Branding Brazil takes a multi-faceted approach, weaving media studies with politics and cinema studies to reveal that more than a marketing term or project emanating from the state, branding was a cultural phenomenon.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781978819290
ISBN-10: 1978819293
Pagini: 220
Ilustrații: 9 b-w images
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Rutgers University Press
Colecția Rutgers University Press

Notă biografică

LESLIE L. MARSH is an associate professor at Georgia State University in Atlanta. She specializes in Latin American film and media studies, focusing on Brazil and more broadly on questions of citizenship. She is the author of Brazilian Women’s Filmmaking: From Dictatorship to Democracy and co-edited with Hongmei Li The Middle Class in Emerging Societies: Consumers, Lifestyles and Markets.
 

Cuprins

Introduction: Welcome to the “New Brazil”
1 Branding Brazil through Cultural Policy
2 Negotiating the Past in the Dictatorship Film Cycle
3 Courting the New Middle Class on Primetime TV
4 Selling Citizenship in Alternative Media
5 Favela, Film, Franchise
6 Another Good Neighbor? U.S.-Brazil Relations Revisited On-Screen
Conclusion: States of Upheaval: The Marks That Linger
Acknowledgments
Filmography
Notes
References
Index
 

Recenzii

"This is an audacious book that makes an indispensable contribution to our understanding of one of the most contradictory periods in contemporary Brazilian history. Leslie Marsh uses branding to discuss the construction of a 'new' Brazil through the discursive practices of film, photography, and television to elucidate how they were shaped by utopian impulses and challenged, but also often upheld, the inequities of capitalism."
 

“As it assesses strategies of branding during a particularly effervescent moment in Brazilian history, this book articulates the role of media in shaping national identity and citizenship ostensibly defined by the postnational.”

Descriere

Branding Brazil examines a panorama of contemporary cultural productions including film, television, photography, and alternative media to explore the transformation of citizenship in Brazil. The book takes a multi-faceted approach, weaving media studies with politics and cinema studies to reveal that more than a marketing term or project emanating from the state, branding was a cultural phenomenon.