Thursday, November 29, 2012
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
"The Guardian" focussing on Catalonia
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
Spain's Inditex in the New York Times Magazine
One of Spain's most successful companies (fashion retailer, ZARA et al.) portrayed here.
Labels:
Amancio Ortega,
Bershka,
fashion,
Galicia,
Inditex,
Massimo Dutti,
Oysho,
Pull+Bear,
Stradivarius,
Uterqüe,
Zara,
Zara Home
Monday, November 12, 2012
The NY Times on Spain's home evictions
A harsh reality that has already led people to suicide in crisis-ridden Spain, taken up by The New York Times here.
Labels:
economic crisis,
home evictions,
Spain,
The New York Times
Saturday, November 10, 2012
Quim Monzo: Oh! Europe
Catalan writer Quim Monzó published on Nov. 9 his daily column in La Vanguardia newspaper with the above title.
It reads more or less like this:
[The head of the regional government of Catalonia, Arthur] Mas went [this week] to Brussels to explain that Catalonia is an old European nation; that Spain, instead of dialogue it offers shouts; that, if we get to that occasion, "we will demand shelter from the European Union, appealing to the democratic values of its foundation;" and that, in the same way that "Catalonia in all of its history has never failed Europe, we hope that Europe will not let down Catalonia."
Oh, ingenious! It is exactly because a great part of Europe let us down three centuries ago, there happened what happened. Britain, Austria, Portugal and the United Provinces betrayed their accord with Catalonia and left it without protection and at the mercy of Philipp V. This disloyalty was so obvious that in 1714 the House of Lords held sessions in which it debated the situation in which it had left the Catalans. They even published two books on the affair: "The case of the Catalans considered", and "Deplorable history of the Catalans"; a manner of self-criticism of the treason that ended with the Treaty of Utrecht. That Europe is not the modern one, but I would not put a lot of trust in the latter one, either.
It reads more or less like this:
[The head of the regional government of Catalonia, Arthur] Mas went [this week] to Brussels to explain that Catalonia is an old European nation; that Spain, instead of dialogue it offers shouts; that, if we get to that occasion, "we will demand shelter from the European Union, appealing to the democratic values of its foundation;" and that, in the same way that "Catalonia in all of its history has never failed Europe, we hope that Europe will not let down Catalonia."
Oh, ingenious! It is exactly because a great part of Europe let us down three centuries ago, there happened what happened. Britain, Austria, Portugal and the United Provinces betrayed their accord with Catalonia and left it without protection and at the mercy of Philipp V. This disloyalty was so obvious that in 1714 the House of Lords held sessions in which it debated the situation in which it had left the Catalans. They even published two books on the affair: "The case of the Catalans considered", and "Deplorable history of the Catalans"; a manner of self-criticism of the treason that ended with the Treaty of Utrecht. That Europe is not the modern one, but I would not put a lot of trust in the latter one, either.
Labels:
Artur Mas,
Catalonia,
Europe,
La Vanguardia,
Quim Monzó
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