Dr. Bernard Schulz-Cruz is the Chair of Spanish Studies and Associate Professor in the Department of Critical Studies at the University of British Columbia - Okanagan in Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada. Dr. Schulz-Cruz holds a Ph.D. in Romace Studies from the University of British Columbia.
2010 0-7734-1417-7 This book explores the accommodations made by the eye of the camera in its search for a homosexual body and gay identity. An analysis of Mexican movies produced during the last third of the 20th century reveals the emergence, the evolution, the articulation, the subversion and the liberation of gay images in Mexican cinema, but also a necessary addition for the full understanding those images in the context of changing Mexican society.
The existing studies surrounding homosexuality in Mexican cinema criticize the stereotypical representations of the gay personality. What has not been consciously analyzed is the cinematographic and aesthetic displacement that was gradually construting the gay male imaginary between 1970 and 1999 and projecting the imaginary into th 21st century.
This book publicly presents gay thematic material and recognizes the existence of the other, be it a representation of the virile, effeminate, or ostracized, and of a gay body that expresses itself and relates to the world differently.