Broadcasting Modernity: Cuban Commercial Television, 1950-1960 (Console-Ing Passions) (Paperback)

Broadcasting Modernity: Cuban Commercial Television, 1950-1960 (Console-Ing Passions) By Yeidy M. Rivero Cover Image

Broadcasting Modernity: Cuban Commercial Television, 1950-1960 (Console-Ing Passions) (Paperback)

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The birth and development of commercial television in Cuba in the 1950s occurred alongside political and social turmoil. In this period of dramatic swings encompassing democracy, a coup, a dictatorship, and a revolution, television functioned as a beacon and promoter of Cuba's identity as a modern nation. In Broadcasting Modernity, television historian Yeidy M. Rivero shows how television owners, regulatory entities, critics, and the state produced Cuban modernity for television. The Cuban television industry enabled different institutions to convey the nation's progress, democracy, economic abundance, high culture, education, morality, and decency. After nationalizing Cuban television, the state used it to advance Fidel Castro's project of creating a modern socialist country. As Cuba changed, television changed with it. Rivero not only demonstrates television's importance to Cuban cultural identity formation, she explains how the medium functions in society during times of radical political and social transformation.
Yeidy M. Rivero is Associate Professor of Screen Arts and Cultures at the University of Michigan. She is the author of Tuning Out Blackness: Race and Nation in the History of Puerto Rican Television, also published by Duke University Press.
Product Details ISBN: 9780822358718
ISBN-10: 0822358719
Publisher: Duke University Press
Publication Date: March 27th, 2015
Pages: 264
Language: English
Series: Console-Ing Passions