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Iberosphere

News, comment and analysis on Spain, Portugal and beyond

Iberoblog

Barcelona still in charge, but they’re driving Madrid in the right direction

December 15, 2011 by Sarath Balachandran Leave a Comment

There remained only a few brave souls, hardcore Real Madrid fanatics who stayed not out of choice, but because they know no other way. Twisting the knife they may have been, but the wound was so familiar it barely stung anymore. As the last minutes of the Clásico wound down and Señor Borbalán blew the final whistle, the cheers of the Catalans sounded once more in the sanctum sanctorum of their sworn enemy. The dejection of the Madridistas was palpable; they had thought this would be their time, the catharsis of three years of humiliation. A 3-1 defeat it may have been, but in the grand scheme of things for Real Madrid it still represents progress, and the gap between the two sides continues … [Read more...] about Barcelona still in charge, but they’re driving Madrid in the right direction

Filed Under: Iberoblog Tagged With: Barça, barcelona, Barcelona and Real Madrid, cristiano ronaldo, José Mourinho, Mourinho, Real Madrid, real madrid barcelona, real-barça, Ronaldo, spain, Spain football, spain news, spain soccer, spanish football, spanish news, Spanish soccer

The mobile society: A more mobilised society?

December 14, 2011 by Víctor Manuel Pérez Martínez Leave a Comment

Mobile phones have gone from being a simple means of communication to a tool with multiple applications that have become an essential part of our professional and personal lives. As such, the advance and confluence of technology allows us to consider new perspectives through which we can understand the processes of change that are occurring in our interconnected society - other forms of interaction or focuses of interest in an environment in which it seems that everything has yet to be discovered. Mobile technologies have introduced a different dimension into social life amid a complex web of human relations in everything from politics and business to the closest and most intimate human … [Read more...] about The mobile society: A more mobilised society?

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Filed Under: Iberoblog Tagged With: 15M, communications, democracia 4.0, mobile communications, Mobile Society, spain protests

Art not Bombs

December 14, 2011 by Anthony Steyning 1 Comment

It is remarkable how a small nation can fill such giant shoes in the world of contemporary sculpture as the Basque Country does through artists like Chillida, Oteiza and a dozen others. On first arriving in Spain one is struck by their oversized creations in public places, giving airs of freshness and modernity to a country no longer dark. It is later that we realise these are the same grand masters from that minuscule province whose work we find in Berlin, Paris and many other places of infinitely larger import. And these two men are contemporaries, though I have no idea if they were friends or foes but most certainly having had to be rivals, at times coming very close to magically … [Read more...] about Art not Bombs

Filed Under: Featured, IberoArts, Iberoblog Tagged With: basque art, Basque country, chillida, oteiza, spain, spain news, spanish art, spanish news

How do you choose the Iberians of 2011?

December 12, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

Spain's indignados in Madrid

Choosing a “person of the year” is rarely easy and when Iberosphere co-editor Andrew Eatwell and I set about deciding on the Iberians of 2011, the difficulties were all too clear. So many events unfold over the course of 12 months: political, economic, cultural, sporting and otherwise. Is a football player more worthy of attention than a politician? Is a writer more important than a banker? Obviously, that depends on what each achieved and how much importance you attach to football, politics, literature and banking. For us, each can be of huge significance to a nation’s state of mind, if not its everyday life. But there is a more general issue. What is it that we are gauging? From the start … [Read more...] about How do you choose the Iberians of 2011?

Filed Under: Iberoblog Tagged With: 15-m, 15M, Basque radical left, blog, cristiano ronaldo, ETA, iberians of the year, iberians2011, indignados, Javier Marías, María Dolores de Cospedal, pedro passos coelho

El Clásico offers Mourinho a glimpse of glory

December 9, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 1 Comment

While Spain’s La Liga contest has long been seen as a two-horse race, the Champions League is also starting to show signs of falling into the grasp of the Real Madrid-Barcelona duopoly. That impression is, admittedly, based heavily on this week’s elimination of two English giants from the European competition, Manchesters United and City. But with the two Spanish sides strolling into the knock-out stages, their status as the best in Europe has been further burnished. So when they meet on Saturday in Madrid’s Santiago Bernabéu to contest the Clásico, the eyes of the world will be on them. Barcelona have eight players nominated for UEFA’s 2011 team of the year; Real Madrid have six. … [Read more...] about El Clásico offers Mourinho a glimpse of glory

Filed Under: Iberoblog, Spain News Tagged With: Barça, barcelona, Champions League, cristiano ronaldo, El Clásico, football, José Mourinho, la liga, Mourinho, mourinho real madrid, real madrid barcelona, Real Madrid vs Barça, Real Madrid vs Barcelona, soccer, spain, Spain football, spain liga, spain news, spain soccer, spanish football, spanish news, Spanish soccer

The Outsiders!

December 7, 2011 by Anthony Steyning Leave a Comment

Music doesn’t generally create history, but accompanies it for better or for worse. Same tides, same flow: rising with human comeuppance, or descending alongside a collective human crash. And the human race itself is like water: slowly flowing to the lowest point, changing its composition to rise to the top, only to fall down again. So that music is like water, we can’t live without it but it also celebrates our funerals. Horace Silver and Paul Gonsalves were two Portuguese Cape Verdeans, who made an enormous contribution to American Jazz by creating beautiful rhythmic flow, just ask Duke Ellington. I’m not a Fadista so I don’t know if there were any outside influences on the … [Read more...] about The Outsiders!

Filed Under: Featured, IberoArts, Iberoblog, Music Tagged With: Cante Jondo, Capriccio Espagnol, fado, flamenco, o fado, Onkel Wolf, portugal news, Portuguese music, portuguese news, spain, spain news, spanish music, spanish news

Kafka in Spain

November 29, 2011 by Anthony Steyning 3 Comments

Kafka’s is the art of comic exasperation deploying absurd, even paranoid pseudo logic, labyrinthine insurance company and regulatory double-thought and dead-end speak, at one point probably convincing Derrida and the rest of the deconstructionists to become plumbers. Of course, calling officials, their projects and indirectly the Government itself the Arrangement, says a lot about Kafka's own state of mind. (Personally, I think the Deranged is more like it!), but he still created world literature out of the texts that as an insurance lawyer and later a Workman's Compensation Board verifier, engulfed him. He imitated the structures of treacherously simplistic but circular language so … [Read more...] about Kafka in Spain

Filed Under: Iberoblog Tagged With: Don Quijote, Prague Castle, Walter Mitty, Workman Compensation Board

O Lusitania

November 22, 2011 by Anthony Steyning Leave a Comment

Tabucchi loves Lisbon, the film director Wenders loves Lisbon, and I much like Lisbon: the sweet urban decadence of it, the formidable Atlantic ocean of it making it Europe’s last vestige on the southern flank, but also an easy, open way to the new world, as far as the immensely flowing Amazon. A city in a nation well positioned for potential greatness, but Portugal still needing to be represented in the international literary canon with its only available candidate at one point, the poet Fernando Pessoa it seems. A chap through his compositions and spiritual meanderings contributing to its name, ironically named pessoa, meaning person in Portuguese, yet a man cleverly made up of many … [Read more...] about O Lusitania

Filed Under: Iberoblog Tagged With: Fernando Pessoa, Lisbon, portugal, Portugal literature, portugal news, presence, Wim Wenders Lisbon

Rajoy must take reins swiftly to avoid economic chaos

November 21, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

Mariano Rajoy’s resounding election win has redrawn Spain’s political map and put his Popular Party (PP) firmly in control of the country after seven-and-a-half years of Socialist government. He could hardly face a more difficult task on being voted prime minister. In the days leading up to the election, Spain’s economy was being battered by the markets, with its bond prices close to those of beleaguered Italy. Italy hopes it has just overcome its own political upheaval; Spain’s situation is less clear-cut. Spanish law dictates a lengthy hiatus between a prime minister’s election win and his instatement. José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero’s successor as prime minister was not due to be sworn … [Read more...] about Rajoy must take reins swiftly to avoid economic chaos

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: austerity, debt crisis, economy, eu crisis, eurozone crisis, Mariano Rajoy, Partido Popular, popular party, PP, rajoy, spain, spain austerity, spain debt, spain economy, spain news, spain politics, spanish news, spanish politics

¡Sangre!

November 14, 2011 by Anthony Steyning Leave a Comment

Camus: Balearic blood.

Her name was Catherine Sintes. She was the illiterate child of Catholic peasants from Menorca but grew up near Oran, Algeria, to where many dirt poor Spanish families migrated at the turn of the last century. It was where she married a farm worker raised in a Protestant orphanage, a kid named Lucien Camus, who would give her the son they would soon name Albert. Not an astonishing background, and neither Spain nor Africa are universally known for their thinkers. For even had Catherine stayed home, it is doubtful the Baleares would have produced much more than an avid tennis player. But colonial Algeria producing the melting pot and gene pool that sometimes gives rise to the development … [Read more...] about ¡Sangre!

Filed Under: Iberoblog Tagged With: Albert Camus, camus, literature, spain, spain literature, spain news

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