El teatro guiñol, la televisión Mexicana y la educación para la salud a mediados del siglo XX

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Abstract

This article resurrects the puppet show Las calenturas de Don Ferruco (Don Ferruco’s Fevers), which was televised in the late 1950s in order to help eradicate malaria in Mexico, as a useful instrument for health education. It analyzes how the spread of educational puppet shows on Mexican television showed the need to keep updating preventive healthcare pedagogy and it underlines the importance of television as an educational health-promotion production in the mid-twentieth century. The article discusses the early use of puppet shows as an especially important tool for what would later become mass-media transmission of discourses from the Secretaría de Salubridad y Asistencia (Department of Health and Healthcare).

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APA

Gudiño, M. R., & Sosenski, S. (2017). El teatro guiñol, la televisión Mexicana y la educación para la salud a mediados del siglo XX. Historia, Ciencias, Saude - Manguinhos, 24(1), 201–221. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0104-59702016005000027

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