National Identity in 21st-Century Cuban Cinema tours early 21st-century Cuban cinema through four key figuresthe monster, the child, the historic icon, and the reclusein order to offer a new perspective on the relationship between the Revolution, culture, and national identity in contemporary Cuba. Exploring films chosen to convey a recent diversification of subject matters, genres, and approaches, it depicts a changing industrial landscape in which the national film institute (ICAIC) coexists with international co-producers and small, independent production companies. By tracing the reappearance, reconfiguration, and recycling of national identity in recent fiction feature films, the book demonstrates that the spectre of the national haunts Cuban cinema in ways that reflect intensified transnational flows of people, capital, and culture. Moreover, it shows that the creative manifestations of this spectre screenboth hiding and revealinga persistent anxiety around Cubanness even as national identity is transformed by connections to the outside world.
1. Introduction: Screening the Repeating Island
2. A Cuban Zombie Nation?: Monsters in Havana
3. Not Child's Play: Tactics, Strategies, and Heterotopias
4. Time 'Out of Joint': Icons, Images, and Archives
5. Of Moles and Giraffes: Recluses, Drifters, and Disconnection
6. Conclusion: Shipwrecks and Seasickness
Dunja Fehimovi is Lecturer in Hispanic Studies at Newcastle University, UK. She holds a PhD from the University of Cambridge, UK. She is co-editor of the Screen Arts issue of the Hispanic Research Journal, and co-edited a volume entitled Branding Latin America: Strategies, Aims, Resistance (2018).
Offers new perspectivelS