Abstract
Angélica Velázquez rebuilds in this article the vision of the “faded
woman”, character who dominated in the sphere of the Mexican Romanticism
during the last years of the 19th- century. She has based her search on the
reading of two paintings by Manuel Ocaranza and explains what she calls the
pervert fascination, meaning the feeling that lead the faded woman to
construct the idea of the masculine imaginary. The article then, analyzes
the roll of the woman in a period that transformed the values of the
colonial society into the values of the Liberal Republic. She bases on
different sources such as iconography analysis, literary documents to
support the artistic demonstrations, and documents that are contemporary to
the epoch she studies. The author explains the process by which the
painting and the novel adopted the genre style, the one that portrays the
prevailing customs.
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