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The earliest curated collections in the world, prototypes for what would in the 17th century become the modern museum, were widely referred to as “cabinets.”

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Cuban literature’s newest voices were among the protagonists at this year’s Étonnants Voyageurs Literature Festival, held in the French city of Saint-Malo last week.

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A new book of essays by Argentine philosopher Tomás Abraham revisits his intellectual “heroes,” those artists, musicians, thinkers, and novelists for whom he experiences a powerful and unapologetic “admiration.”

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Colombia’s Alma en Movimiento (Soul in Motion) Project, an initiative aimed at both educating the public about dance and training new ballerinas, has enjoyed tremendous success at achieving both goals.

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In 1965, at 29 years of age, the Uruguayan singer Alfredo Zitarrosa released the album that was soon to make him a national legend: El canto de Zitarrosa. That album, which included such songs as “Milonga para una niña,” “El camba,” “Mire amigo,” and “Recordándote,” was an instant success on the charts, its singles competing

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For a generation of Colombian writers living abroad, Bogotá’s Book Fair offers a chance to return home.

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Un minuto feliz, a new play by Argentine dramatist Santiago Lozano, debuted on May 6th at Chile’s Centro Gabriela Mistral (GAM). The play, written last year while Lozano enjoyed a writer’s residency at the GAM, is based on the Chilean capital’s infamous “cafés con piernas” (cafes with legs), coffee shops where attractive, miniskirt-clad barristas, who

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Brazilian dancer Marcus Abranches premiered a dance piece inspired by Norwegian painter Edward Munch’s iconic painting The Scream on April 29th and 30th at São Paulo’s Dance Reference Center.

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Mexican writer Fernando del Paso has been awarded the Premio Cervantes, the most prestigious literary prize in the Spanish-speaking world.

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Colombian author Laura Restrepo’s new book, Pecado (Sin), takes on the daunting subject of human evil. 

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