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Interview with Maya Goded

Goded, Maya ; Gasiorowski, Dominika

Confluencia (Greeley, Colo.), 2018-03, Vol.33 (2), p.104-110 [Periódico revisado por pares]

Fort Collins: Department of Hispanic Studies, University of Northern Colorado

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  • Título:
    Interview with Maya Goded
  • Autor: Goded, Maya ; Gasiorowski, Dominika
  • Assuntos: 1967 ; Cameras ; Cine mexicano ; Classism ; Cultura mexicana ; Documentales ; Documentaries ; Entrevistas ; Ethics ; Fotografos ; Fotografía ; Goded, Maya ; Interviews ; Mexican cinema ; Mexican culture ; Motion picture directors & producers ; Motion picture festivals ; Motion pictures ; Photographers ; Photography ; Ética
  • É parte de: Confluencia (Greeley, Colo.), 2018-03, Vol.33 (2), p.104-110
  • Descrição: Maya Goded is a documentary photographer and filmmaker born in Mexico City in 1967. Her documentary work is focused on people and communities with little or no visual presence, most often representing the lives of marginalised women. In compelling and intimate documentary images and films, Goded deals with issues such as prostitution/sexwork, feminicide, race, and traditional healing. She has received numerous international awards for her photographic work, including the Guggenheim fellowship, the W. Eugene Smith Award and the Mexican National Council for Culture and the Arts award (mayagoded.net). In May 2017, her feature-length documentary Plaza de la soledad was released in movie theatres across Mexico and earned praise at the Sundance film festival (Smith 2017). I interviewed Maya Goded in Mexico City in 2013, when she was finishing filming the documentary and I was finishing my PhD thesis on her work, parts of which will be published this year in a monograph entitled Photographing the Unseen Mexico: Maya Goded’s Socially Engaged Documentaries (forthcoming, Legenda). In wide-ranging conversations spanning nearly a week, Goded was very generous in sharing her thoughts on the physical, emotional and symbolic violence suffered by the people in front of her camera.
  • Editor: Fort Collins: Department of Hispanic Studies, University of Northern Colorado
  • Idioma: Inglês;Espanhol

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