Academic Journal

Border Witness: Reimagining the US-Mexico Borderlands through Film, by Michael Dear. University of California Press, 2023, 318 pp.

Bibliographic Details
Title: Border Witness: Reimagining the US-Mexico Borderlands through Film, by Michael Dear. University of California Press, 2023, 318 pp.
Authors: Emmanuel Ramos-Barajas
Source: Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media, Iss 26, Pp 214-220 (2024)
Subject Terms: border film genre, cultural geography, us-mexico border, violence representation, cinematic ideology, Visual arts, N1-9211
Publisher Information: University College Cork, 2024.
Publication Year: 2024
Collection: LCC:Visual arts
Description: Michael Dear’s Border Witness: Reimagining the US-Mexico Borderlands through Film offers a profound engagement with a phenomenon he calls the border film genre—in this case, seventy-two films (produced in a span of more than one century) and the narratives they have broadcast globally in that time. As Dear himself declares, “[t]his book is not a work of conventional film criticism or film theory” (68). Rather, it is an intriguing interdisciplinary exercise that draws from multiple subjects—film studies, ethnography, art history, cultural geography, autobiography, history, and political science—to make sense of the Mexico-US borderlands, their inhabitants, and representation. The result is a unique interpretation of the visual and narrative cultural production that has shaped large-scale perceptions about this consequential and oft-mythologised territory. Delivering, in Dear’s own words, “an unabashedly idiosyncratic and opinionated report based in four decades of experience, research, writing, and activism along the southern border”, he places narrative tropes articulated via film production at the centre of this construction (8). Remarkably, Dear has included both US and Mexican productions as his object of study—a perspective few scholars have tackled—to offer multi-focal analyses of border life from both sides of the line.
Document Type: article
File Description: electronic resource
Language: English
ISSN: 2009-4078
Relation: https://www.alphavillejournal.com/Issue26/HTML/ReviewRamosBarajas.html; https://doaj.org/toc/2009-4078
DOI: 10.33178/alpha.26.18
Access URL: https://doaj.org/article/3fba6195b1994c80aa2e09c3a5780b5f
Accession Number: edsdoj.3fba6195b1994c80aa2e09c3a5780b5f
ISSN: 20094078
DOI: 10.33178/alpha.26.18
Database: Directory of Open Access Journals