"Trespassers of Space: Rewriting Female Narratives in Mexican Cinema" by Andrea Ruvalcaba

Publication Year

Spring 2025

Document Type

Thesis

Abstract

How have Mexican cultural figures such as Maria Novaro and Adela Sequeyo made space for themselves in the male-dominated film realm? How and why have these women dared to become “contrabandistas,” or trespassers, in a social fabric defined and governed by men? The same questions apply to the world of Mexican cinema — more specifically Mexican Feminist cinema. Throughout these pages, I will explore how the film Los Pasos de Ana (1991), by the Mexican filmmaker Marysa Sistach, integrates women’s perspectives into Mexican film culture to counteract the neutralization of powerful female representations played out across various facets of Mexican culture. Historically, this neutralization has occurred through male narratives in film that oversimplify female characters, often reducing them to symbols of domesticity, martyrdom, or desire. These pages dive into what is termed “the other cinema” in Mexico. Cinema from the woman’s point of view. This inherently feminist Mexican cinema does not perpetuate the trope of the confined or side-cast woman - a role women are often relegated to in cinematic representations - but instead defines women as thinkers and protagonists of their own narratives.

I will begin this thesis by articulating the story of Adriana and Dolores Ehler, known together as the Ehler sisters, who were two of the earliest female pioneers in Mexican cinema, incorporating creative expression into the spaces of home, labor, and political life in the 1920s in Mexico during the Mexican Revolution. Their work and constant interaction with constructs like gender, nation, and identity, while confronting the limitations placed on women’s creative agency in a male-dominated Mexican cinema industry, paved the way for “the other cinema” or Feminist cinema in modern times for filmmakers like female director Marisa Systach. Following this exploration, I will analyze how Marysa Sistach’s Los Pasos de Ana reclaims female agency and disrupts patriarchal narrative forms through her depiction of the “three places” of women’s lives and experiences. By drawing independently from sociologist Ray Oldenburg’s concept of the “three places”, introduced in his book The Great Good Place (published 1989), I offer a new framework for interpreting the film. While there is no indication that Sistach was directly influenced by Oldenburg’s theory, my analysis uses his model to examine how Los Pasos de Ana visually reflects women’s navigation of three primary spheres of life: the home, the workplace, and spaces of resistance. The first place is the home, where one finds stability and a foundation for personal growth. The second place is the realm of work, where one adopts a role tied to achievement. And the third place that exists beyond these obligations is where each individual expresses themselves with autonomy, such as a public place of entertainment and leisure. Through this theoretical lens, I will examine how Sistach constructs cinematic first, second, and third places in which the female protagonist, Ana, finds a voice, community, and autonomy. Ana’s journey is not only personal but also political, reflecting a broader reality for many Mexican women navigating systems of control. Her story opens a window into the everyday forms of resistance and resilience that define Mexican feminist cinema, positioning Sistach’s work within a history of filmmakers who challenge patriarchal narratives through intimate portrayals of women’s lives.

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