Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: A Crosscurrent of Contemporary Latin American Women Multimedia Writers and Artists
- 1 The Transliterary: The Novel and Other Multimedia Horizons Beyond (and Close to) the Textual
- 2 Commentary on Fe/males: Sieges of the Post Human (Transmedia Installation)
- 3 An Anthropophagic Ch’ixi Poetics
- 4 My Relationship with Artistic Creation Began with Words
- 5 Imagetext
- 6 Voices/Bodies
- 7 Redefining Meaning: The Interweaving of the Visual and Poetic
- 8 The Territory Is Home
- 9 Reflections on a Multimedia Practice
- 10 Digital Weaving
- 11 Eli Neira, Regina José Galindo, and Ana Clavel: “Polluting” Corporealities and Intermedial/Transliterary Crossings
- 12 The Digital Condition: Subjectivity and Aesthetics in “Fe/males” by Eugenia Prado Bassi
- 13 The Transmedia, Post-Medium, Postnational, and Nomadic Projects of Pilar Acevedo, Rocío Cerón, and Mónica Nepote
- 14 The Art of the Hack: Poets Carla Faesler and Mónica Nepote and Booktuber Fátima Orozco
- 15 The Places of Pain: Intermedial Mode and Meaning in Via Corporis by Pura López Colomé and Geografía del dolor by Mónica González
- 16 Words, Memory, and Space in Intermedial Works by Gabriela Golder and Mariela Yeregui
- 17 Fungibility and the Intermedial Poem: Ana María Uribe, Belén Gache, and Karen Villeda
- 18 Hypertext and Biculturality in Two Autobiographical Hypermedia Works by Latina Artists Lucia Grossberger Morales and Jacalyn Lopez Garcia
- 19 Dialogues Across Media: The Creation of (New?) Hybrid Genres by Belén Gache and Marina Zerbarini
- Bibliography
- Index
- Tamesis
14 - The Art of the Hack: Poets Carla Faesler and Mónica Nepote and Booktuber Fátima Orozco
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 December 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: A Crosscurrent of Contemporary Latin American Women Multimedia Writers and Artists
- 1 The Transliterary: The Novel and Other Multimedia Horizons Beyond (and Close to) the Textual
- 2 Commentary on Fe/males: Sieges of the Post Human (Transmedia Installation)
- 3 An Anthropophagic Ch’ixi Poetics
- 4 My Relationship with Artistic Creation Began with Words
- 5 Imagetext
- 6 Voices/Bodies
- 7 Redefining Meaning: The Interweaving of the Visual and Poetic
- 8 The Territory Is Home
- 9 Reflections on a Multimedia Practice
- 10 Digital Weaving
- 11 Eli Neira, Regina José Galindo, and Ana Clavel: “Polluting” Corporealities and Intermedial/Transliterary Crossings
- 12 The Digital Condition: Subjectivity and Aesthetics in “Fe/males” by Eugenia Prado Bassi
- 13 The Transmedia, Post-Medium, Postnational, and Nomadic Projects of Pilar Acevedo, Rocío Cerón, and Mónica Nepote
- 14 The Art of the Hack: Poets Carla Faesler and Mónica Nepote and Booktuber Fátima Orozco
- 15 The Places of Pain: Intermedial Mode and Meaning in Via Corporis by Pura López Colomé and Geografía del dolor by Mónica González
- 16 Words, Memory, and Space in Intermedial Works by Gabriela Golder and Mariela Yeregui
- 17 Fungibility and the Intermedial Poem: Ana María Uribe, Belén Gache, and Karen Villeda
- 18 Hypertext and Biculturality in Two Autobiographical Hypermedia Works by Latina Artists Lucia Grossberger Morales and Jacalyn Lopez Garcia
- 19 Dialogues Across Media: The Creation of (New?) Hybrid Genres by Belén Gache and Marina Zerbarini
- Bibliography
- Index
- Tamesis
Summary
While we might imagine a contestatory function for the intermedial artwork in Spanish available on YouTube, the following reading ends up largely denying such alterity. Videos by three Mexican artists, Mónica Nepote (b. 1970, Guadalajara, Jalisco), Carla Faesler (b. 1967, Mexico City), and Fátima Orozco (b. 1993, Monterrey, Nuevo León) exemplify the flexibility of the categories of the amateur and the professional in an age of distrust for expertise, without pushing the discussion in new directions – sadly for feminists. In a key YouTube video that I discuss, Nepote turns the notion of the voice into an interface, now that of an analogue body, now that of a digital trick. Similar games with mediated presence appear in Faesler's YouTube videos, which include print pages and paper dolls. Orozco, a Mexican book reviewer on YouTube, or Booktuber for short, performs something of a fetish for print books in her videos. Non-poet Orozco at first seems a dissonant choice beside Nepote and Faesler, although I hope that by the end of the present analysis, my reader will understand the stakes of dismissing Orozco's efforts out of hand.
THE SET UP: INTERMEDIALITY, EXPERTISE, AND PRINT
Jan Baetens and Domingo Sánchez Mesa define the term intermediality as an artwork of heterogenous materials in conflict (292). This definition strikes a familiar deconstructive note, and in recognition of that familiarity, Baetens and Sánchez-Mesa nod at the relevance of Kiene Brillenburg's “back to the book” conference, now transformed into an edited volume (298). The relevance of the print book is also hinted at in Mexican critic Roberto Cruz Arzabal's work on materiality and the interface, the point where mediums meet. An enthusiast of Nepote's and Faesler's poetry, Cruz Arzabal launches his criticism from Alexander Galloway's broad definition of interface as a “space of transition between media and forms of language” (“Writing” 244). An interface is usually invisible and therefore when one appears, “it has stopped operating as such and has begun to function as a medium” (“Writing” 244).
Interest in materiality coincides with Edmundo Paz Soldán and Debra Castillo's observation regarding “literature's overall ‘representational privilege’” (cited in Lavery 13). This question of print publication is hardly esoteric – or even a truly alternative topic, especially if distribution systems for e-book editions of print material are taken into account.
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- Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2023