• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Spain
  • Portugal
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Culture
    • IberoArts
      • Books
      • Music
      • Films
  • Iberoblog
    • Videos
  • About Iberosphere
    • Contributors
    • Contact
    • Fine print
      • Privacy Policy
      • Disclaimer
      • Copyright

Iberosphere

News, comment and analysis on Spain, Portugal and beyond

Nick Lyne

Remember Gernika – but don’t forget Chaouen

May 3, 2012 by Nick Lyne 1 Comment

The last few weeks have seen commemorations, mainly in the Basque Country, of the 75th anniversary of the bombing by German and Italian warplanes of the historic town of Gernika at the behest of General Francisco Franco during the Spanish Civil War. Around 4.30 in the afternoon of April 26, 1937, a joint squadron of 23 German and Italian planes appeared in the skies over the historic, and undefended, Basque town. Over the next five hours they dropped a total of 22 tons of high explosives and incendiary devices that burned for days, destroying 70 percent of the town, and killing and wounding at least 1,600 people, around a third of the population. Gernika remains a powerful symbol of … [Read more...] about Remember Gernika – but don’t forget Chaouen

Filed Under: Featured, Politics, Spain News Tagged With: Basque, Basque country, Franco, Gernika, Gernika bombing, guernica, Picasso Gernika, spain, spain news, spanish civil war, spanish news, Spanish news in English

What now for Spain’s monarchy?

April 24, 2012 by Nick Lyne 1 Comment

The dung from King Juan Carlos’ accident, while on a private trip to Botswana to kill elephants during which he broke his hip, has well and truly hit the proverbial fan, with Spain revelling in an unprecedented outpouring of criticism in the media that looks set to continue. The King has apologised for the gaffe, promising on state television to Spaniards before limping out of hospital: “it will never happen again.” Ouch: that must have hurt more than the crack he gave himself after tripping over his tent peg on safari. However humbling the experience, his plea to be given a chance to redeem himself and get back to being the king everybody loves may have been too little, too late. He … [Read more...] about What now for Spain’s monarchy?

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: affair, Juan Carlos, king juan carlos, spain, spain economy, spain king, spain news, spain politics, Spain royalty, spanish news

Spain’s Freedom of Information Act? Not by a long chalk…

April 2, 2012 by Nick Lyne Leave a Comment

On March 22, to muted fanfare, the Spanish government announced a new law supposedly giving the public access to official documents and records. Announcing the Transparency and Good Government Law, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said his aim was to tackle the country’s chronic corruption by allowing people to know “who is spending their money.” The new legislation would see the creation of a website with all public administrations’ and ministries’ financial details, including salaries and contracts, along with rules guaranteeing the public’s right to access information on public spending and a best practices code. Let’s be clear about this, the government’s proposals are not, by any … [Read more...] about Spain’s Freedom of Information Act? Not by a long chalk…

Filed Under: Featured, Politics, Spain News Tagged With: corruption, ley de transparencia, Mariano Rajoy, spain, spain news, Spain transparency law, spanish news, Spanish news in English, test

The Serrat–Sabina generation: sitting comfortably

February 27, 2012 by Nick Lyne Leave a Comment

Looking back over the last 50 years of so of popular music, it’s probably a safe enough conclusion to draw that at least one of the secrets of a performer’s enduring popularity is to be inexorably associated with fast-changing times. For most of us, however banal it might seem to the rest of the world — and we may ourselves not even realise it at the time — there is always a moment in life after which things are never quite the same; a high point or an event, a moment, after which events overtake us; when we grow up and settle down to earning a living, raising a family; that sort of thing. For the more Romantic among us, the times leading up to that high point in life, otherwise known … [Read more...] about The Serrat–Sabina generation: sitting comfortably

Filed Under: Culture, Featured, IberoArts, Music, Spain News Tagged With: juan manuel serrat, La orquesta del Titánic, sabina, serrat, serrat sabina, spain, spain music, spain news, spanish news

Goya 2012: no joy for Almodóvar

February 21, 2012 by Nick Lyne Leave a Comment

I can’t say I was unhappy to be proved wrong in predicting the winners at Sunday’s Goya Awards. Never believe the media. Given the hype, Pedro Almodóvar’s The Skin I Live In looked set to sweep the board, with 16 nominations. But instead the Spanish Film Academy gave the best prizes to Enrique Urbizu’s No Rest for the Wicked, which carried off Best Picture and Best Director, while veteran José Coronado took Best Actor for his portrayal of a maverick cop in the gritty police thriller — the fabulous curly perm he sports in the role was worth an award in itself. Interviewed as he entered the gala event at Madrid’s Opera House, Almodóvar gave the impression he had been tipped off that he … [Read more...] about Goya 2012: no joy for Almodóvar

Filed Under: Culture, Featured, Films, IberoArts, Spain News Tagged With: Almodóvar, Black Bread, Goya, premios goya, Sleeping Voice, spain, Spain cinema, spain news, Spanish cinema, spanish news, Spanish news in English, the skin I live in

Franco in a fridge: he pulls in the punters, but is he art?

February 20, 2012 by Nick Lyne Leave a Comment

More than 36 years after heading for the great military dictatorship in the sky, General Francisco Franco proved his enduring pulling power by stealing the show at last week’s annual ARCO contemporary art fair, appearing in a fridge and as a fast-spinning bust; even his eyebrows were a big draw. Siempre Franco (Forever Franco) was the star attraction at the five-day artfest, a life-size hyperrealist representation of the man who ruled Spain with an iron fist for four decades. The piece was created by Eugenio Merino out of resin, silicon, and human hair, and was decked out in Franco’s trademark green military uniform with purple sash, red cummerbund, and dark sunglasses, crouching inside a … [Read more...] about Franco in a fridge: he pulls in the punters, but is he art?

Filed Under: Culture, Featured, IberoArts, Spain News Tagged With: ARCO, Eugenio Merino, Eugenio Merino Siempre Franco, francisco franco, Franco, Franco ARCO, Siempre Franco, spain, spain art, spain civil war, spain news, spanish news, Spanish news in English, valle de los caidos, valley of the fallen

Even Spanish TV feels the pain

January 30, 2012 by Nick Lyne Leave a Comment

As part of swingeing spending cuts being implemented at the behest of the European Central Bank, the Spanish government is to slash state broadcaster RTVE’s budget this year by €200 million to €1.2 billion. RTVE’s board says the cuts will have a “devastating impact” on its programming, predicting that its audience figures for its two channels La 1 and La 2, will drop by 8 percent. La 1 frequently tops audience ratings thanks to hugely popular programs such as Cuéntame como pasó — a long-running drama telling the story of a family from the Franco era up to the present day— or fantasy saga Águila roja, and post-Civil War soap opera Amar en tiempos revueltos. But the channel says that the … [Read more...] about Even Spanish TV feels the pain

Filed Under: Business, Featured, Spain News Tagged With: eurozone crisis, rajoy, RTVE, spain, spain budget deficit, spain debt, spain economy, spain news, spain politics, spain tv, spanish civil war, spanish economy, spanish news, Spanish TV

It’s gonna be a love fest at the Goya awards

January 18, 2012 by Nick Lyne Leave a Comment

With 16 nominations, Pedro Almodóvar's The Skin I Live In (La piel que habito) will probably sweep the board on Sunday February 19, when Spain’s Film Academy announces the winners in the 26th annual Goya Awards. Bringing up second place will likely be Enrique Urbizu's thriller No Rest for the Wicked, which has 14 nominations, followed by Kike Maillo's directorial debut Eva with 12. Sunday night looks set to be a very public kiss and make up between Oscar-winning Almodóvar and the Academy, bringing to an end a frosty few years. The 16 nominations end a period of chilly relations between Almodóvar and the Spanish academy, which the director quit five years ago over changes to the … [Read more...] about It’s gonna be a love fest at the Goya awards

Filed Under: Culture, Featured, Films, IberoArts, Spain News Tagged With: Almodóvar, Broken Embraces, Daniel Brühl, Goya, la piel que habito, madrid, Paris, Pedro Almodóvar, premios goya, salma hayek, Sleep Tight, Sleeping Voice, spain, Spain cinema, spain news, spanish movies, spanish news, the skin I live in

Spain’s literary giants are lost in English translation

January 11, 2012 by Nick Lyne 3 Comments

An indisputable criterion of success for any novelist is when Penguin Modern Classics signs up your backlist, especially when it’s for a five-figure sum. Which is what has happened to Javier Marías. The 60-year-old Spanish writer, whose latest title, The Infatuations (Los enamoramientos), will be published in English in early 2013, joins an exclusive group of Spanish writers in Penguin’s catalogue: Cervantes, Quevedo, Jacinto Benavente, and Lorca. Yes, that’s it. Four writers: the first two of whom died in the 17th century, the next in 1954; although he stopped writing long before that. For Penguin, and most US and UK publishers, it seems that, until now, Spanish literature ended with the … [Read more...] about Spain’s literary giants are lost in English translation

Filed Under: Books, Culture, Featured, IberoArts, Spain News Tagged With: El Jarama, garcia lorca, Javier Marías, literature, LORCA, los enamoramientos, los enamoramientos english, Modern Classics, Penguin, penguin modern classics, spain, spain news, spanish literature, spanish news, Spanish news in English

Spain’s Civil War film canon needs new urgency

October 28, 2011 by Nick Lyne 3 Comments

It’s a terrible thing to have to say, but maybe the time has come for a moratorium on films about the Spanish Civil War. Last week saw the release of The Sleeping Voice (La voz dormida), an adaptation of Dulce Chacón’s novelised account of the vengeance exacted upon Republican women in the immediate aftermath of the Civil War by the Franco regime. In late 1939 in Ventas prison in Madrid, a group of women await the firing squad for having supported the Republican cause, or for having husbands, brothers and fathers who did. Among them are Hortensia, who fought with the militia and is pregnant by her husband Felipe  – still at large – and who has been told she will be shot after she gives … [Read more...] about Spain’s Civil War film canon needs new urgency

Filed Under: Culture, Featured, Films, Spain News Tagged With: civil war, film, Franco, la voz dormida, news from spain, pa negre, Sleeping Voice, spain, spain franco, spain news, spanish civil war, spanish film, spanish movies, spanish news

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Go to page 2
  • Go to page 3
  • Go to page 4
  • Go to page 5
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 7
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

The End

Iberosphere calls it a day after three-and-a-half years

Recent Comments

  • Tim on What I learned in a Spanish brothel
  • tom scott on Sex and the Spanish single lady
  • tom scott on What I learned in a Spanish brothel
  • Matt on Sex and the Spanish single lady
  • betty on Madrid, capital of the special advertising section

Recent Posts

  • The End
  • Maybe Rajoy is right: deny everything and it’ll go away
  • A slow death in the afternoon
  • Tales for Tapas: Leaving Spain
  • Spain ahead of the US in bankers’ prosecution

Copyright © 2025 · Iberosphere · Log in