New Book: Dangerous Curves: Latina Bodies in the Media by Isabel Molina-Guzman

Dangerous Curves: Latina Bodies in the Media by Isabel Molina-Guzman

With images of Jennifer Lopez’s butt and America Ferrera’s smile saturating national and global culture, Latina bodies have become an ubiquitous presence. Dangerous Curves traces the visibility of the Latina body in the media and popular culture by analyzing a broad range of popular media including news, media gossip, movies, television news, and online audience discussions.

Isabel Molina-Guzmán maps the ways in which the Latina body is gendered, sexualized, and racialized within the United States media using a series of fascinating case studies. The book examines tabloid headlines about Jennifer Lopez’s indomitable sexuality, the contested authenticity of Salma Hayek’s portrayal of Frida Kahlo in the movie Frida, and America Ferrera’s universally appealing yet racially sublimated Ugly Betty character. Dangerous Curves carves out a mediated terrain where these racially ambiguous but ethnically marked feminine bodies sell everything from haute couture to tabloids.

Through a careful examination of the cultural tensions embedded in the visibility of Latina bodies in United States media culture, Molina-Guzmán paints a nuanced portrait of the media’s role in shaping public knowledge about Latina identity and Latinidad, and the ways political and social forces shape media representations.

About the author:

Isabel Molina-Guzman was born in Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico to a Puerto Rican mother and Dominican father. She migrated to Florida, USA at the age of 7 with her two younger sisters. In 2000 she earned her Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania Annenberg School for Communication.

Her new book Dangerous Curves: Latina Bodies in the Media reflects her long-standing interest in the intersections between gender, race, and Latina/o identity. She began researching the book in 1999 at the height of the international media storm over the fate of Elian Gonzalez. At the same time news media attention was focusing on the young Cuban boy refugee, she noticed the increasing visibility of Puerto Rican entertainers Jennifer Lopez and Mexican actor Salma Hayek. Together the news and entertainment visibility struck her as indicative of larger social and cultural transformations in the United States. The book explores why Latinas are so visible in the news and entertainment media today and the cultural and political consequences of such visibility.

Molina-Guzman currently lives in Champaign, Illinois. She is the Director of the Latina/Latino Studies Program at the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign where she is also an associate professor of Media and Cinema Studies, Latina/Latino Studies, and Gender and Women’s Studies.

Her work has appeared in numerous edited collections such as Myra Mendible’s From Banannas to Buttocks: The Latina Body in Popular Film and Culture (University of Texas Press) and Angharad Valdivia’s Latino Communication Studies (Peter Lang) and scholarly journals such as Critical Media Communication Studies, Journalism, Latino Studies.

Spread the love

More Articles for You

I, Medusa by Ayana Gray: A Myth Retold with Power and Humanity

Ayana Gray’s I, Medusa reimagines the mythic villain as sister, priestess, survivor. Read Valerie M. Evans’ review of this bold, haunting retelling.

Spread the love

Brooklyn’s Jane Doe: A Shocking True Story of Assault, Media Betrayal, and Delayed Justice

Book review and critique by Valerie M. Evans: Brooklyn’s Jane Doe reveals how one woman’s assault became a public smear, and why her fight for justice still matters today.

Spread the love

Other Inheritances: Scent Memories from a Childhood at Fat’s Pet Shop in East Harlem

Before I ever knew what a perfumer was or that someone could make a living decoding and remixing scent, I …

Spread the love

Ghosts of the Palisades: Threads between memories, places and time

Somewhere tucked away, high on the Palisades, on lovely, dead end street, in the ether of the internet and Google …

Spread the love

Eight Goodbyes: Love, Loss, and the Six Years That Changed Everything

The first to die that year, the year before COVID-19 changed everything, was my aunt, Ruth or “Chin” as we …

Spread the love

How DNA, Haplogroups, and Genetic Markers Reveal Taíno Heritage

The Genetic Echoes of the Taíno People The Taíno people, the first known inhabitants of the Caribbean, have long been …

Spread the love