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Visual arts
Cultural expressions primarily experienced through sight (e.g., painting, sculpture, photography, architecture, film, graphic design, fashion, street art).
Performing arts
Arts experienced through a live or recorded performance (e.g., theater, dance, music, opera, performance art).
Cultural product
A concrete cultural creation or work (e.g., a mural, film, choreography, song) that can be analyzed for meaning.
Cultural practice
How culture is created, shared, and lived (e.g., visiting museums, going to theater, dancing at celebrations, making graffiti).
Cultural perspective
The values, beliefs, and ideas reflected in cultural products and practices (e.g., historical memory, local pride, political critique, spirituality).
Muralism
A Mexican visual art movement strengthened after the Mexican Revolution that used large public murals to educate, build national identity, and communicate social/political messages.
Cinematography
How a film uses camera choices (framing, lighting, focus) to guide attention and create meaning rather than simply “show reality.”
Montage (editing)
The arrangement and pacing of shots that can speed up or slow down time, build tension, or create reflection and argument in film.
Urban art
Street-based visual art (including murals and graffiti) that can express neighborhood belonging, youth voice, celebration of identity, and/or protest.
Legality vs. cultural legitimacy (in street art)
A key distinction in analyzing graffiti/urban art: whether it is permitted by law (legality) versus whether the community recognizes it as valuable art (legitimacy).
Literary movement
A set of shared themes, styles, and values in literature that emerges from a specific historical and cultural context (not just a memorized label).
Tone
The author’s attitude or emotional stance (e.g., nostalgic, ironic, critical, intimate) that shapes how the reader interprets meaning.
Romanticism
A movement emphasizing emotion, subjectivity, and freedom, often featuring an intense “I,” idealized love/nature, and conflict between the individual and social norms.
Realism
A style that portrays everyday life with social detail (class, work, family, norms) to reveal or critique social structures rather than idealize them.
Modernismo (Hispanic)
A late-19th/early-20th-century movement emphasizing refined beauty, musical language, and sensory/exotic imagery, often treating art as aesthetic elevation or refuge.
Vanguardias (avant-gardes)
Experimental movements that break artistic norms through fragmentation, surprising images, and language play, asking why art must follow traditional forms.
Magical realism
Narrative style where extraordinary elements appear as normal and unquestioned in everyday life, often symbolizing cultural memory, history, trauma, or spirituality (not simply “fantasy”).
Latin American Boom
A period of internationally visible Latin American novels known for narrative innovation (nonlinear structures, multiple voices, complex time) tied to questions of history and identity.
Beauty ideals
Social norms (explicit or implicit) about what is attractive, elegant, or “correct” in bodies, clothing, spaces, and even speech; they affect identity, belonging, and opportunity.
Socialization (and beauty)
How family, school, and community teach what is “presentable” or desirable through everyday messages that shape self-image and expectations.
Media and social networks (beauty)
Systems that amplify beauty standards by repeating similar images, normalizing filters/editing, and linking appearance to success and consumption—while sometimes also promoting diversity.
Eurocentrism
Prioritizing European features and aesthetics as the ideal standard, often rooted in historical power relationships and visible in representation and “professional” expectations.
Colorism
Preference for lighter skin tones within the same racial/ethnic group, influencing casting, advertising, daily treatment, and opportunities.
Gender expectations (beauty)
Social pressure that different groups “should” look a certain way (often stricter for women, but also affecting men), varying by age and reinforcing inclusion/exclusion.
Globalization (beauty and aesthetics)
The fast spread of trends that can expand aesthetic options but also homogenize standards, creating tension between global influences and local identity.