Waubonsee Community College

Flowers for Guadalupe / flores para Guadalupe, produced by Judith Gleason with the collaboration of the Colectivo Feminists de Xalapa and Elisa Mereghetti

Label
Flowers for Guadalupe / flores para Guadalupe, produced by Judith Gleason with the collaboration of the Colectivo Feminists de Xalapa and Elisa Mereghetti
Language
eng
Characteristic
videorecording
Intended audience
For College; Adult audiences
Main title
Flowers for Guadalupe / flores para Guadalupe
Medium
electronic resource
Oclc number
747795997
Responsibility statement
produced by Judith Gleason with the collaboration of the Colectivo Feminists de Xalapa and Elisa Mereghetti
Runtime
57
Summary
Flowers for Guadalupe/Flores para Guadalupe explores the importance of the Virgin of Guadalupe as a liberating symbol for Mexican women today. In the course of this richly textured treatment of an evolving symbol, twenty-three women speak out, in traditional testimonio format. This unusual "contata" of women s voices representing urban, small-town, and rural communities, is intercut with scenes of daily women's work and celebration of the Virgin of Guadalupe in various contexts, including festivities organized by the Comite Guadalupano in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, N. Y. Women have been silenced for centuries in Mexico. By focusing on various feminine forms of devotion to the Virgin of Guadalupe as Mexican women's "role model," an entire world of consciousness unfolds. It is a resilient, hard-working, often painful, violent world, encompassing women of all ages and from various walks of life. They belong to a wider world of popular devotion, historically both exploited and dismissed as unimportant by ecclesiastical authorities who would keep women in a place where they no longer want to be. The documentary follows an all-women pilgrimage from Queretaro state through several arduous but joyful days as it weaves its way through difficult terrain, harsh weather and congested streets to the Virgin s shrine in Mexico City. The songs of Rosa Martha Zarate, Mexico s "singing nun," sustains this and every woman s pilgrimage
Target audience
general
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