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Elena, Princesa of the Periphery Diana Leon-Boys

Elena, Princesa of the Periphery By Diana Leon-Boys

Elena, Princesa of the Periphery by Diana Leon-Boys


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New RRP £56.00
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Summary

In the summer of 2016, Disney introduced its first Latina princess, Elena of Avalor. Princesa of the Periphery explores this Disney property using multiple case studies to understand its approach to girlhood and Latinidad.

Elena, Princesa of the Periphery Summary

Elena, Princesa of the Periphery: Disney's Flexible Latina Girl by Diana Leon-Boys

In the summer of 2016, Disney introduced its first Latina princess, Elena of Avalor. Princesa of the Periphery explores this Disney property using multiple case studies to understand its approach to girlhood and Latinidad. Following the circuit of culture model, author Diana Leon-Boys teases out moments of complex negotiations by Disney, producers, and audiences as they navigate Elena's circulation. Case studies highlight how a flexible Latinidad is deployed through corporate materials, social media pages, theme park experiences, and the television series to create a princess who is both marginal to Disney's normative vision of princesshood and central to Disney's claims of diversification. This multi-layered analysis of Disney's mediated Latina girlhood interrogates the complex relationship between the U.S.'s largest ethnic minority and a global conglomerate that stands in for the U.S. on the global stage.

Elena, Princesa of the Periphery Reviews

In this fascinating and insightful study, Diana Leon-Boys demonstrates how Disney has constructed notions of Latina girlhood through its first Latina princess. Through apt exploration of Elena of Avalor on screen and at Disney theme parks, she illuminates how Latina girls' media is positioned as both Latin American and Latinx, and always peripheral to the U.S. mainstream. -- Mary Beltran * author of Latino TV: A History and Latina/o Stars in U.S. Eyes: The Making and Meanings of Film and *
In this fascinating and insightful study, Diana Leon-Boys demonstrates how Disney has constructed notions of Latina girlhood through its first Latina princess. Through apt exploration of Elena of Avalor on screen and at Disney theme parks, she illuminates how Latina girls' media is positioned as both Latin American and Latinx, and always peripheral to the U.S. mainstream. -- Mary Beltran * author of Latino TV: A History and Latina/o Stars in U.S. Eyes: The Making and Meanings of Film and *
In this fascinating and insightful study, Diana Leon-Boys demonstrates how Disney has constructed notions of Latina girlhood through its first Latina princess. Through apt exploration of Elena of Avalor on screen and at Disney theme parks, she illuminates how Latina girls' media is positioned as both Latin American and Latinx, and always peripheral to the U.S. mainstream. -- Mary Beltran * author of Latino TV: A History and Latina/o Stars in U.S. Eyes: The Making and Meanings of Film and *
In this fascinating and insightful study, Diana Leon-Boys demonstrates how Disney has constructed notions of Latina girlhood through its first Latina princess. Through apt exploration of Elena of Avalor on screen and at Disney theme parks, she illuminates how Latina girls' media is positioned as both Latin American and Latinx, and always peripheral to the U.S. mainstream. -- Mary Beltran * author of Latino TV: A History and Latina/o Stars in U.S. Eyes: The Making and Meanings of Film and *
In this fascinating and insightful study, Diana Leon-Boys demonstrates how Disney has constructed notions of Latina girlhood through its first Latina princess. Through apt exploration of Elena of Avalor on screen and at Disney theme parks, she illuminates how Latina girls' media is positioned as both Latin American and Latinx, and always peripheral to the U.S. mainstream. -- Mary Beltran * author of Latino TV: A History and Latina/o Stars in U.S. Eyes: The Making and Meanings of Film and *
In this fascinating and insightful study, Diana Leon-Boys demonstrates how Disney has constructed notions of Latina girlhood through its first Latina princess. Through apt exploration of Elena of Avalor on screen and at Disney theme parks, she illuminates how Latina girls' media is positioned as both Latin American and Latinx, and always peripheral to the U.S. mainstream. -- Mary Beltran * author of Latino TV: A History and Latina/o Stars in U.S. Eyes: The Making and Meanings of Film and *
In this fascinating and insightful study, Diana Leon-Boys demonstrates how Disney has constructed notions of Latina girlhood through its first Latina princess. Through apt exploration of Elena of Avalor on screen and at Disney theme parks, she illuminates how Latina girls' media is positioned as both Latin American and Latinx, and always peripheral to the U.S. mainstream. -- Mary Beltran * author of Latino TV: A History and Latina/o Stars in U.S. Eyes: The Making and Meanings of Film and *
Well researched and argued, Princesa of the Periphery is a welcome contribution to Latinx/girls/media studies. Focusing on Elena of Avalor, one of Disney's newest 'empowered' yet marginalized princesses, Leon-Boys helps us to understand the complexities of representing and performing Latina girlhood in U.S. popular culture while also drawing attention to the potential consequences of such depictions for Latina girls, who are hungry for public recognition and deserving of authentic role models. -- Mary Celeste Kearney * author of Girls Make Media and editor of Mediated Girlhoods *
Well researched and argued, Princesa of the Periphery is a welcome contribution to Latinx/girls/media studies. Focusing on Elena of Avalor, one of Disney's newest 'empowered' yet marginalized princesses, Leon-Boys helps us to understand the complexities of representing and performing Latina girlhood in U.S. popular culture while also drawing attention to the potential consequences of such depictions for Latina girls, who are hungry for public recognition and deserving of authentic role models. -- Mary Celeste Kearney * author of Girls Make Media and editor of Mediated Girlhoods *
Well researched and argued, Princesa of the Periphery is a welcome contribution to LatinX/girls/media studies. Focusing on Elena of Avalor, one of Disney's newest 'empowered' yet marginalized princesses, Leon-Boys helps us to understand the complexities of representing and performing Latina girlhood in U.S. popular culture while also drawing attention to the potential consequences of such depictions for Latina girls, who are hungry for public recognition and deserving of authentic role models. -- Mary Celeste Kearney * author of Girls Make Media and editor of Mediated Girlhoods *
Well researched and argued, Princesa of the Periphery is a welcome contribution to Latinx/girls/media studies. Focusing on Elena of Avalor, one of Disney's newest 'empowered' yet marginalized princesses, Leon-Boys helps us to understand the complexities of representing and performing Latina girlhood in U.S. popular culture while also drawing attention to the potential consequences of such depictions for Latina girls, who are hungry for public recognition and deserving of authentic role models. -- Mary Celeste Kearney * author of Girls Make Media and editor of Mediated Girlhoods *
Well researched and argued, Princesa of the Periphery is a welcome contribution to LatinX/girls/media studies. Focusing on Elena of Avalor, one of Disney's newest 'empowered' yet marginalized princesses, Leon-Boys helps us to understand the complexities of representing and performing Latina girlhood in U.S. popular culture while also drawing attention to the potential consequences of such depictions for Latina girls, who are hungry for public recognition and deserving of authentic role models. -- Mary Celeste Kearney * University of Notre Dame, author of Girls Make Media and editor of Mediated Girlhoods *
Well researched and argued, Princesa of the Periphery is a welcome contribution to LatinX/girls/media studies. Focusing on Elena of Avalor, one of Disney's newest 'empowered' yet marginalized princesses, Leon-Boys helps us to understand the complexities of representing and performing Latina girlhood in U.S. popular culture while also drawing attention to the potential consequences of such depictions for Latina girls, who are hungry for public recognition and deserving of authentic role models. -- Mary Celeste Kearney * University of Notre Dame, author of Girls Make Media and editor of Mediated Girlhoods *
Well researched and argued, Princesa of the Periphery is a welcome contribution to LatinX/girls/media studies. Focusing on Elena of Avalor, one of Disney's newest 'empowered' yet marginalized princesses, Leon-Boys helps us to understand the complexities of representing and performing Latina girlhood in U.S. popular culture while also drawing attention to the potential consequences of such depictions for Latina girls, who are hungry for public recognition and deserving of authentic role models. -- Mary Celeste Kearney * University of Notre Dame, author of Girls Make Media and editor of Mediated Girlhoods *
This is a vital and sophisticated study of the connection between Latina girlhood and the dream machine that is Disney. Leon-Boys attends to the voices of Latina girls, and complements this with powerful insights on how Latina girls are seen within media production cultures. The result is a powerful and compelling argument about the marketization of dreams and the reconstitution of Latina marginalization. -- Hector Amaya * author of Citizenship Excess: Latinos/as, Media, and the Nation *
This is a vital and sophisticated study of the connection between Latina girlhood and the dream machine that is Disney. Leon-Boys attends to the voices of Latina girls, and complements this with powerful insights on how Latina girls are seen within media production cultures. The result is a powerful and compelling argument about the marketization of dreams and the reconstitution of Latina marginalization. -- Hector Amaya * author of Citizenship Excess: Latinos/as, Media, and the Nation *
This is a vital and sophisticated study of the connection between Latina girlhood and the dream machine that is Disney. Leon-Boys attends to the voices of Latina girls, and complements this with powerful insights on how Latina girls are seen within media production cultures. The result is a powerful and compelling argument about the marketization of dreams and the reconstitution of Latina marginalization. -- Hector Amaya * author of Citizenship Excess: Latinos/as, Media, and the Nation *
This is a vital and sophisticated study of the connection between Latina girlhood and the dream machine that is Disney. Leon-Boys attends to the voices of Latina girls, and complements this with powerful insights on how Latina girls are seen within media production cultures. The result is a powerful and compelling argument about the marketization of dreams and the reconstitution of Latina marginalization. -- Hector Amaya * author of Citizenship Excess: Latinos/as, Media, and the Nation *
This is a vital and sophisticated study of the connection between Latina girlhood and the dream machine that is Disney. Leon-Boys attends to the voices of Latina girls, and complements this with powerful insights on how Latina girls are seen within media production cultures. The result is a powerful and compelling argument about the marketization of dreams and the reconstitution of Latina marginalization. -- Hector Amaya * author of Citizenship Excess: Latinos/as, Media, and the Nation *
This is a vital and sophisticated study of the connection between Latina girlhood and the dream machine that is Disney. Leon-Boys attends to the voices of Latina girls, and complements this with powerful insights on how Latina girls are seen within media production cultures. The result is a powerful and compelling argument about the marketization of dreams and the reconstitution of Latina marginalization. -- Hector Amaya * author of Citizenship Excess: Latinos/as, Media, and the Nation *
This is a vital and sophisticated study of the connection between Latina girlhood and the dream machine that is Disney. Leon-Boys attends to the voices of Latina girls, and complements this with powerful insights on how Latina girls are seen within media production cultures. The result is a powerful and compelling argument about the marketization of dreams and the reconstitution of Latina marginalization. -- Hector Amaya * author of Citizenship Excess: Latinos/as, Media, and the Nation *

About Diana Leon-Boys

DIANA LEON-BOYS is an assistant professor in the department of communication at the University of South Florida, Tampa.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Latina Girls' Media Studies
1 From Black-and-White Mouse to Latina Girl
2 The Flexible Production of a Latina Princess
3 Animated Latina Girlhood and the Continuum of Flexibility
4 On-Site Performance of Latinidad from East Coast to West Coast
Conclusion: A Princess for All Is a Princess Without a Home
Acknowledgments
Notes
References
Index

Additional information

GOR013276629
9781978830189
1978830181
Elena, Princesa of the Periphery: Disney's Flexible Latina Girl by Diana Leon-Boys
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Rutgers University Press
20230317
182
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Elena, Princesa of the Periphery