The Role of Lucha Libre in the Construction of Mexican Male Identity

Pereda, Javier and Murrieta-Flores, Patricia (2011) The Role of Lucha Libre in the Construction of Mexican Male Identity. Networking Knowledge, 4 (1).

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Abstract

Lucha Libre has played an important role in Mexican culture since the late 1950s. The sport became famous mainly due to its masked wrestlers, who incorporated their own family traditions, beliefs and fears into the design of their masks, transforming an ordinary person into a fearless character. After the introduction of the Monsters Cinema in the 1930s, Mexican audiences welcomed and adopted characters like Dracula, Nosferatu, Frankenstein and The Werewolf. The success of Monster Cinema in Mexican culture was based on the integration of national legends and beliefs, placing them in local and identifiable concepts in the Mexican popular imagination. Later, Lucha Libre Cinema mixed with Monster Cinema resulting in the birth of new heroes and myths. These emergent paladins of the Mexican metropolis set the cultural and moral standards of that time and how Mexicans wanted to be perceived. Through an anthropological and historical analysis of Mexican Cinema and Lucha Libre, this paper investigates the main social interaction of male wrestlers who perform as heroes inside the celluloid world and outside of it. We explore how masculinity and the male figure evolves in Lucha Libre Cinema, and the processes that wrestlers have to undergo in order to be able to portray themselves as superheroes of an evolving and fast growing Mexico.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Networking Knowledge
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/aacsb/disciplinebasedresearch
Subjects:
?? LUCHA-LIBREMEXICOMALE IDENTITYCULTURAL STUDIESHISTORYF1201 LATIN AMERICA (GENERAL)DISCIPLINE-BASED RESEARCH ??
ID Code:
57759
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
21 Aug 2012 10:43
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
11 Sep 2023 15:18