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El Malpensante [2] and Universo Centro [3] have also both published some his short stories and articles. In 2014 he was awarded the Bogotá Institute of Arts Book Award with his novel "Sin freno por la senda equivocada", [ 4 ] [ 5 ] which was later published by El Peregrino Ediciones. [ 6 ]
El Malpensante (Spanish: The Misthinker) is a Colombian literary magazine of reportage, commentary, criticism, essays, fiction, satire, short stories, graphic art and poetry founded in 1996. Its founders were Andrés Hoyos Restrepo and Mario Jursich Durán .
He has published journalistic and opinion pieces in outlets such as the New York Times, BBC and Al Jazeera, and his stories have appeared in Gatopardo and El Malpensante. He won the 2013 Calendario Prize for his short story collection La tarde de los sucesos definitivos. In 2017, he published La tribu.
Profesora Rosa-Linda Fregoso, a Latin American and Latino Studies (LALS) professor at University of California, Santa Cruz, gives her scholarly insights in the documentary. Nine years after the publishing of her 1993 book, The Bronze Screen: Chicana and Chicano Film Culture, the documentary releases, covering many of the same Latino themes. [14]
Héctor Joaquín Abad Faciolince was born and raised in Medellín (), with five sisters, the son of Cecilia Faciolince and Héctor Abad Gómez.Abad's father was a prominent medical doctor, university professor, and human rights leader whose holistic vision of healthcare led him to found the Colombian National School of Public Health.
He was anthologized in the book Umpalá (Sic Editores, 2006), Inhabited heart, and Recent Stories about Love in Colombia (Algaida.Grupo Anaya, 2010.Spain). [6] He published one of the first anthologies of Colombian short-stories in the 21st century, called Signals of path, which featured 27 Colombian authors (Señales de ruta, Arango Editores, 2008 and 2012 ebook re-edition) [7] [8] [9]
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Bohemian Lights, or Luces de Bohemia in the original Spanish, is a play written by Ramón del Valle-Inclán, published in 1924. [1] The central character is Max Estrella, a struggling poet afflicted by blindness due to developing syphilis.