"Connecting cinema and television history, bottom-up activism and international cultural transfer, Leading Women in Spanish Cinema and Television in the Long 1970s reframes Spanish transition to democracy as it hasn't been told before. The volume focuses our attention on names and stories usually overseen, on voices rarely heard and on archival sources so far ignored. The result is a thought-provoking and feminist reading of a story we thought we knew so well. Timely and wide-ranging, this book is an important read for anyone interested in Spanish media and cultural history." -- Fernando Ramos, Associate Professor of European Cinema History, Complutense University in Madrid, Spain "This meticulously researched book presents a fascinating picture of an overlooked element of Spanish cinema of the period; the contribution of women. Drawing on numerous sources, including exhaustive interviews, close analysis and careful presentation of data Faulkner and Triana-Toribio shed light on forgotten, or erased, narratives of the creative contributions that women made to film and television production in the long 1970s in Spain. Significantly, this is a feminist approach that moves away from the primacy of the director-auteur to focus on the below-the-line roles frequently occupied by women. This ambitious book will be a must-read for Hispanists and film and media scholars alike.
" -- Abigail Loxham, Senior Lecturer, University of Liverpool, UK.