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The first novel to directly address homosexuality in war comes from Chilean historian Rafael Mellafe. Tres caminos a Tacna tells a story about three gay men who cross paths during the Pacific War.

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The Cuban Institute of Cinematographic Art and Industry (ICAIC) tried to pacify the members of the film labor union in Cuba saying that the new prohibitions for work do not affect them. However, filmmakers feel otherwise.

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Multiple art galleries from different parts of Latin American came together on February 4, 2021, to launch an association of art galleries titled “Art Focus Latin America.”

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Rã, written and directed by Ana Flávia Cavalcanti and Julia Zaki is based on Cavalcanti’s childhood memory of her sister and her mother when she was around six years old in Eldorado, Diadema, Brazil.

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Mexican archeologist Marco Antonio Cervera says evidence indicates Mexicans would eat their enemies as part of wartime ritual.

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The new book on Gabriel García Márquez’s work on Macondo has a foreword by Mexican writer Alma Guillermoprieto and was edited by Conrado Zuluaga, journalist and expert on the Colombian writer.

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On January 29, Beatriz Barba, founder of the Mexican Academy of Anthropological Sciences and the first Mexican woman to earn a degree in archeology, passed away.

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A new film began streaming on Cine.ar and Cine.ar Play on January 28.

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Peruvian writer José María Arguedas never wanted the academisation of folklore and much less could have imagined that the only state institution dedicated to its teaching would be named after him.

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The documentary Imperdonable (Unforgivable), directed by Salvadoran film maker Marlén Viñayo, premiered February 5 through El Faro on Vimeo On Demand.

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