Studies in Latin American Popular Culture

Studies in Latin American Popular Culture SLAPC is published annually by the University of Texas Press. Editor: Melissa A. Articles are written in English, Spanish, or Portuguese.

Fitch, The University of Arizona

Studies in Latin American Popular Culture, an annual interdisciplinary journal, publishes articles, review essays, and interviews on diverse aspects of popular culture in Latin America.

08/08/2023
Have you taken advantage of UT Press's current promo yet? Our most read article of 2022, "Popular Culture, Politics, and...
01/20/2023

Have you taken advantage of UT Press's current promo yet? Our most read article of 2022, "Popular Culture, Politics, and Alternative Gender Imaginaries in 1960s and 1970s Argentina" by Adriana Premat is open access on Project Muse until February 6th!
https://muse.jhu.edu/article/580313

Here's a look at the contents of our latest volume,  #38. Publishing this week!
06/11/2020

Here's a look at the contents of our latest volume, #38. Publishing this week!

The 2018 annual issue of Studies in Latin American Popular Culture is out! Articles in Vol. 36:• Property Wars, Discover...
06/13/2018

The 2018 annual issue of Studies in Latin American Popular Culture is out! Articles in Vol. 36:

• Property Wars, Discovery, and Surfing Paradise
• Charro Representations in Mexican Popular Culture
• The Migration Genre in La jaula de oro
• Iberian Elements in Curaçaoan Popular Culture
• Betzabé García's Los reyes del pueblo que no existe
• Representations of Black Womanhood in Mexico
• Violeta Parra y las tecnologías migrantes
• The Hybrid Aesthetics of Violeta Parra's Paintings
• Taming the Wild Woman in Mexican Telenovelas

Also on Project MUSE: http://muse.jhu.edu/journal/506

Cover: Studies in Latin American Popular Culture Studies in Latin American Popular Culture Purchase Type Subscription / Renewal Single Issue Purchaser Type Institution Individual Journal Format Print Purchase Location Canada International US $43.00

10/13/2017

Offering new perspectives on informal commerce and citizenship, this history explains how the transition from slavery to freedom both empowered and constrained the poor, black, and immigrant street vendors of Rio de Janeiro.

Learn more: https://utpress.utexas.edu/books/acerbi-street-occupations

Address

3001 Lake Austin Boulevard , 2. 200
Austin, TX
78703

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Studies in Latin American Popular Culture posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share

Category