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Pasión y Deseo
Passion and Desire. Songs, Bodies, and Resilience in Andalusian Folklore is a journey into the ways in which Andalusian popular culture has been—and continues to be—a space for expression and resistance for dissidents. Combining art history, poetic sensitivity, academic research, and sentimental memory, Roy del Postigo unravels the echoes of a tradition that, beyond mistaken and self-interested interpretations, has been a refuge and altar for those who have lived on the margins.
The figure of Isabel Pantoja, a tonadillera by the grace, duende, and spirit of Andalusia, whose musical career runs parallel to the last five decades of Spain’s history, becomes a starting point and beacon. The voice of the singer of «Marinero de luces» or «Se me enamora el alma» calls, in many of her songs, to those who identify with whispers, stigmatization, criticism, and misunderstanding.
Pin-cushion maricones on the chests of virginal divas, ladies of their duties who are atacás from holding on too long, sapphic Rocío friends, trans-Maribelas, travestis from La Nogalera, and a whole array of dissident figures from the South accompany Isabel on her pilgrimage of songs turned paths of liberation.
But the story neither begins nor ends with her: Southern folklore was already weaving—and continues to weave—a flamenco dress made with desires and subversive gestures on the skin of artists like Lola Flores, Marifé de Triana, Diana Navarro, María Peláe, and Pastora Soler. Musical icons who have been and will be inspiration for drag performers like La Esmeralda de Sevilla, Satin Greco, and Jota Carajota.
With great doses of erudition and an art that takes away the sentío, Roy del Postigo offers a work in which the South is not just a postcard landscape, but a political, creative, and spiritual force guided by the Andalusian Dolorosas, folkloric and subaltern.
A book that is, at the same time, an essay, an altar of coplas, and a love letter to those who turned art into freedom. Because in these songs, identity is embroidered with sequins and paraded in procession.