Tiras, timbres y estereotipos: el Negro Memín Pinguín y la manipulación de la cultura popular con representaciones étnicas
Author
Faculty Advisor
Date
2008
Keywords
Memín Pinguín, Mexico, borderlands, African American studies, Memín, Vicente Fox, George Bush, borders, comics, comic books, comic strips, stamps, filatelic, philatelic, racism, stereotypes
Abstract (summary)
Memín Pinguín is the Black protagonist in a famous set of comics that first appeared in Mexico in 1945. However coincidental, the proximity of a speech by the Mexican President on 13 May 2005 and the appearance a fortnight later of five postage stamps commemorating Memín Pinguín suggests a connection between these two events. This study of the Memín Pinguín stamp controversy, connected to the presidential speech, explains how postage stamps function as a literary genre —a type of cuento corto, perhaps, among comic strips— and considers the ways in which these texts cross national, linguistic, and cultural borders, creating questions about ethnic images and who has the right to manage them.
Publication Information
Katz, Marco. “Tiras, timbres y estereotipos: el negro Memín Pinguín y la manipulación de la cultura popular con representaciones étnicas”. Culturas Populares. Revista Electrónica 5 (julio-diciembre 2007), 21pp. http://www.culturaspopulares.org/textos5/articulos/katz.pdf
DOI
Notes
Item Type
Article
Language
Spanish
Rights
All Rights Reserved