Resultados de búsqueda - "satirical"

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  1. Amagada, perseguida y ¿sometida? Discurso satírico-visual y normativa legal sobre la libertad de imprenta. Ciudad de México, 1868-1883 Gantús, Fausta

    Historia Mexicana

    2019
    “…Threatened, Persecuted and…Subjugated? Visual-Satirical Discourse and Legal Regulations on the Freedom of the Press in Mexico City, 1868-1883…”
  2. ¿Héroe o villano? Porfirio Díaz, claroscuros. Una mirada desde la caricatura política Gantús, Fausta

    Historia Mexicana

    2016
    “…Throughout Porfirio Díaz’s public life, and especially during the regime in which he served as president, a wide variety of illustrated satirical newspapers were published in Mexico, many of which used caricature as part of their strategy of praise or criticism. …”
  3. La delincuencia económica en Chile: antecedentes teóricos e históricos sobre los “ladrones de levita y guante”, 1880-1920 Palma Alvarado, Daniel

    Historia Mexicana

    2021
    “…The sources include theoretical literature, press clippings and court documents that allow us to identify the constitutive elements of these crimes and some of their social representations, with an emphasis on the satirical and popular press.The contribution of this article consists of making visible a series of practices that, over the long term, have been at the base of the process of the construction and reproduction of the capitalist social and economic order, up to the present day.…”
  4. La ciudad de la gente común. La cuestión social en la caricatura de la ciudad de México a través de la mirada de dos periódicos: 1883-1896 Gantús, Fausta

    Historia Mexicana

    2010
    “…The author describes how the presence of actors and situations related to phenomena such as poverty, social unrest, and problems  concerning the lower classes started  to form part of the universe of issues touched by cartoonists, coexisting with —sometimes  even displacing— political issues, which had until then dominated the visual satire's arena. The exploratory paths followed  in this work  show how cartoons built a visual discourse regarding the social effects of capitalist and modernizing policies, and lead to the discussion of how social issues became part of Mexican cartoons.…”

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