Culture of class : Radio and Cinema in the Making of a Divided Argentina, 1920–1946
Autor
Karush, Matthew B.
Institución
Resumen
I
n 1932 the writer Roberto Arlt described the challenge facing Communist organizers in Argentina:
‘‘Out of 100 proletarians, 90 have never heard of Karl
Marx, but 90 can tell you how Rudolph Valentino
used to kiss and what kind of mustache [the Hollywood actor] José Mojica wears.’’∞ Arlt’s pessimism
regarding the revolutionary potential of the nation’s
workers was prescient. To the immense disappointment of a generation of leftist intellectuals, the large
majority of the Argentine working class would reject
Socialist and Communist parties, embracing instead
the populist movement built by Juan and Eva Perón
in the mid-1940s. But more illuminating than Arlt’s
assessment of working-class consciousness is his
reference to the movies. Arlt recognized not only
that workers made up a substantial proportion of
the audience for mass culture in Argentina, but also
that the mass culture they consumed must have had
a significant impact on their consciousness, one potentially as decisive as their experience of exploitation or their participation in class struggle.