cultural programme april 2015 history Latin American Dictatorships Series #1: Human Rights and the Judiciary in Post-Authoritarian Argentina By Dr. Ezequiel González Ocantos THU 16, 6:30pm In English Organised by Canning House and Instituto Cervantes London Auditorium Instituto Cervantes London Tickets £10 | Concessions £5 for members of Canning House and Instituto Cervantes London (code CERVANTESMEMBER) Bookings: www.canninghouse.org/events/ Canning House and Instituto Cervantes are co-presenting this series of talks that looks at military dictatorships in 20th Century Latin America and their legacies to present day. Each talk will focus on a different country. This lecture explores the role of the Argentine judiciary in addressing the legacies of state repression. The unprecedented wave of human rights prosecutions currently under way in Argentina is the result of a profound ideational transformation in the judicial branch orchestrated by human rights activists since the early 1990s. The lecture will show that despite the importance of changes in civil-military relations and the human rights policies promoted by the executive branch, the recent explosion of human rights trials would have not been possible in the absence of changes in the legal cultures of key judicial players, or without the dismantling of island of corporatist resistance to the trials by judicial actors in several provinces and in the upper echelons of the federal judiciary. Ezequiel González Ocantos – Associate Professor in the Department of Politics and International Relations at the University of Oxford, and Professorial Fellow in Nuffield College. His current book project explores the behaviour of Latin American judges in cases of serious human rights violations. His articles have been published in the American Journal of Political Science, Comparative Politics and Comparative Political Studies. González Ocantos holds a B.A. in Social and Political Sciences from the University of Cambridge and a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Notre Dame. THEATRE “Hand In Hand” at Southwark Cathedral A bilingual recital by the Spanish Theatre Company FRI 17 & SAT 18, 8:00pm In English and Spanish With the collaboration of the Office of Cultural and Scientific Affairs, Embassy of Spain in the UK and Instituto Cervantes London Media partner El Ibérico Southwark Cathedral, London Bridge, London SE1 9DA Tickets £15 Further information: http://www.spanishtheatrecompany.org.uk/ A bilingual recital composed of sonnets by William Shakespeare and Lope de Vega, and monologues from both of their dramatic works. They will be recited in their original language and accompanied by music of the period, performed live on laud, guitar, violoncello, and with a mezzosoprano. ‘Hand in Hand’ is not simply a recital but a staging in which the actors will have costume and props, bringing the texts more to life for the public. This performance by Spanish Theatre Company will express the spirit of the newly formed company very well. Alicia Sánchez will be the guest director, working in close collaboration with the artistic director of STC, Jorge de Juan. Both of them are to participate as performers. Félix Lope de Vega y Carpio (1562 – 1635) was a Spanish playwright and poet. He was one of the key figures in the Spanish Golden Age. His reputation in the world of Spanish literature is second only to that of Cervantes, while the sheer volume of his literary output is unequalled, making him one of the most prolific authors in the history of literature. William Shakespeare (1564 – 1616) was an English poet, playwright and actor, widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world’s pre-eminent dramatist. His extant works, including some 38 plays 154 sonnets, two long narrative poems, and a few other verses, the authorship of some of which is uncertain. His plays have been translated into every major living language and are performed more often than those of any other playwright. LITERATURE LECTURE SERIES SPANISH AND LATIN AMERICAN LITERATURE MIGUEL DE CERVANTES AWARDS. Jorge Guillén y la poesía como símbolo de esperanza By Dr. Diana Cullell (University of Liverpool) MON 20, 6:30pm In English Organised by the Office of Cultural and Scientific Affairs, Embassy of Spain in the UK and Instituto Cervantes London Admission free Further information: http://www.spainculturescience.co.uk/ Jorge Guillén (1893 – 1984) member of the Generación del 27, which also included some of the most prominent figures in Spanish literature such as Federico Garcia Lorca, Rafael Alberti, Pedro Salinas and Luis Cernuda. He studied Philosophy and Literature in Granada and Madrid, at the Residencia de Estudiantes. He graduated in 1913. He taught Spanish at Sorbonne University (Paris) from 1917 to 1923 (also at Oxford years later), where he began to write his first collection of poems called Cántico (Song of Praise). The first edition was published in 1929 in the Revista de Occidente. Guillén shows a strong influence of Juan Ramón Jiménez but rejects his persistent tendency toward sublimation of human emotions into transcendental or symbolic values. In 1924, he earned his PhD, with a dissertation on Góngora’s notoriously difficult and, at that time, neglected long poem Polifemo. In 1925, he became the chair of Literature at Universidad de Murcia and three years after at Universidad de Sevilla. Guillén went into exile during the Spanish Civil War (1938) to the United States, where he taught Literature and Spanish Language at Wellesley College for 20 years, until his retirement in 1957. He continued to give lectures at Harvard, Princeton and Puerto Rico. Jorge Guillén has been awarded prestigious prizes such as Premio Miguel de Cervantes (1976), the Premio Internacional Alfonso Reyes (1977), the Award of Merit from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the San Luca Prize (1964), the Ollin Yolitzli Prize and the Bennet Prize for poetry (1975). He returned to Spain in 1977 and died in 1984 in Malaga. The bulk of his work is collected together in the book Aire nuestro, published in 1968, comprising three of his major books: Cántico (1928), Clamor (in three volumes in 1957, 1960, and 1963) and Homenaje (1967). Dr. Diana Cullell is Senior Lecturer in Hispanic Studies at the University of Liverpool, where she has been lecturing and researching since 2008. She completed her undergraduate degrees in Spanish Philology and in Romance Philology at the Universitat de Girona (Spain), before moving to the University of Manchester in 2004, where she completed MA and her PhD in Spanish Literature. Dr. Cullell’s main research interests are Spanish and Catalan Contemporary Poetry and Fiction; in particular new forms of poetry, representations of the body in poetry and notions of identity in Catalan poetry. Diana Cullell has published extensively on her research topics. She is the author of La poesía de la experiencia española de finales del siglo XX al XXI (Devenir, 2010) and of Spanish Contemporary Poetry (Manchester University Press, 2014). She is Assistant Editor of the Bulletin of Hispanic Studies and Editorial Board Member for Devenir Ensayo. arts exhibition the waiting room. Spanish exile in the United Kingdom MON 27 APR – TUE 30 JUN EXHIBITION OPENING MON 27, 6:30pm MON – FRI 10:30am – 7:00pm SAT 10:30am – 3:30pm Exhibition Room and Room 01, Instituto Cervantes London Admission free Further information: http://www.iccommunication.co.uk The waiting room. Spanish exile in the United Kingdom Spanish exiles arrived in the UK in the first part of the XX century. Trapped between two wars their presence was a period of transition that for some became permanent. This project serves to introduce a dialogue about the intellectual contribution of those who came to this country and to present their story as part of the very history of the UK. Would it be possible today to rethink the notion of exile beyond its typical association of being a forced condition? Could that formulation give place to the creation of a new outcome, a global citizen able to transit among borders and cultures? The Waiting Room through two months of music, cinema, book, documentary, talks and art intends to explore these vital questions around exile, memory and identity, highlighted by a city as extraordinary as London. MuSIC the SPANISH AND LATIN AMERICAN MUSIC AT Instituto Cervantes London concert series #5: Ahmed Dickinson Cárdenas & Helen Sanderson GUITAR DUET THU 30, 7:00pm Organised by Instituto Cervantes London In collaboration with ILAMS Auditorium Instituto Cervantes London Tickets: £12; Concessions £6 members of Instituto Cervantes London, ILAMS, senior citizens, full-time students and ES40 holders Booking: [email protected] | 0207 201 0752 Ahmed Dickinson Cardenas is a sophisticated virtuoso of the guitar. Born in Havana, he graduated from the Superior Institute of Art (ISA Havana) in Guitar for which he was awarded a first-class honours degree. In 2005 he went to England to study with Carlos Bonell and Chris Stell at the Royal College of Music immediately winning prizes at the Royal College of Music Guitar Competition and the Ivor Mairant Guitar Competition. In 2006 he undertook further studies with Robert Brightmore at the Guildhall School of Music & Drama. Dickinson Cardenas has performed at the Royal Albert Hall, Wigmore Hall, Sage Gateshead, Union Chapel, Queen Elizabeth Hall, St Martin-in-the-Fields. Helen Sanderson studied guitar at the Royal College of Music with Charles Ramirez, and accompaniment with John Blakely, graduating with the Anthony Saltmarsh Prize and the Madeline Walton Prize for Guitar. Her passion for chamber music has led to partnerships with eminent counter tenor James Bowman, tenor Mark Wilde and mezzo-soprano Susan Legg. As a founder member of the VIDA Guitar Quartet, Helen has performed at many of the UK’s prestigious concert venues including the Southbank Centre, King’s Place, St. Georges-Bristol, and the Sage Gateshead. Helen is founder and Artistic Director of Winchester Guitar Festival. Programme Héctor Angulo Para Roberto y Clara | Dedicación/Momento musical Carlos Fariñas Música para dos guitarras (UK premiere) Eduardo Martín Suite Habana | Sones y flores | Aguas profundas (UK premiere) | Hasta Alicia baila | Preludio, canto y rezo a Obatalá In collaboration with
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