Playlist:  Guadalupe - AVON by Jodi Johnson

Titles that explore the vision of the Virgin Mary and the importance of the Virgin of Guadalupe as a liberating symbol for Mexican women today.
Sorry, due to rights restrictions, some of the items in this playlist are unavailable to you.
Format
Artwork
Title
Notes
Duration / Pages
Date added
 
Flowers for Guadalupe / Flores Para Guadalupe
produced by Judith Gleason and Elisa Mereghetti, Colectivo Feminists de Xalapa (New York, NY: Filmakers Library, 1996), 1 hour 7 mins  
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 focussing 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.
01:06:35
8 Nov 2017
Exploring the World, Mexico 9: Introduction to Puebla and Coatepec
directed by Giorgio Saturnino, fl. 1999; presented by Sandra Neil; produced by Brenda DeBoer, fl. 2013, in Exploring the World (Derry, NH: Chip Taylor Communications, 2013), 22 mins  
Puebla, built in 1532, is one of the oldest European settlements in Latin America, and is known as the "City of Ninety-Nine Churches." Examples include the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, completed in 1649, which has the tallest bell towers in Mexico, and is one of the most beautiful cathedrals in the country. Santo Domingo Church is known for its Baroque altars and was originally part of a Dominican monastery completed in 1611. Also we learn of Talavera Pottery, which is famous among Mexican crafts. These colorful ceramic tiles and artifacts with strong Moorish influence are a type of majolica earthenware still manufactured with the same techniques as in the 16th century. Coatepec, in the heart of Mexico's coffee region, has the flavor of Old Mexico and is home to the neoclassical style church Virgin Lady of Guadalupe. Then we visit Posada Coatepec Hotel, one of the most charming haciendas in Mexico, with peaceful gardens, original paintings and tiled rooms decorated with antiques, which offer history with a warm welcome
21:53
8 Nov 2017
Delete playlist item?