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miércoles, 14 de septiembre de 2022

Your Newspaper, 14th of September

Premio Nacional de Literatura Infantil y Juvenil 2022

 

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Rafael Salmerón, Premio Nacional de Literatura Infantil y Juvenil 2022

Rafael Salmerón López ha sido galardonado con el Premio Nacional de Literatura Infantil y Juvenil correspondiente al año 2022 por la obra La rama seca del cerezo, a propuesta del jurado reunido ayer. 

 

El galardón lo concede el Ministerio de Cultura y Deporte para distinguir una obra de un autor o autora española, escrita en cualquiera de las lenguas oficiales del Estado y publicada en España en su primera edición durante el pasado año 2021.


Este libro fue el ganador del Premio Anaya 2021, y también recibió el reconocimiento de la Fundación Cuatrogatos en sus premios anuales y formó parte de la selección OEPLI 2021.

 

El jurado del Premio Nacional ha elegido esta obra por “por su estructura sólida, por su rico lenguaje y por su cuidado estilo con el que consigue envolver al lector hasta el final”. Además, ha destacado que "sin hacer concesiones al dramatismo, y con un extraordinario trabajo de documentación, recompone el desastre histórico de Hiroshima en contraposición con el Japón actual y abre la puerta a la esperanza. Una narración con la que el autor construye un universo cercano para los jóvenes lectores, a los que logra transmitir un mensaje de superación".


Rafael Salmerón López nació en Madrid en 1972. Estudió Ciencias de la Educación e Ilustración y Diseño Gráfico. Comenzó su andadura en el mundo de la literatura infantil y juvenil como ilustrador, allá por el año 1994. Pero, desde el año 2001, dedica la mayor parte de su tiempo a escribir sus propias historias, unas historias que quiere compartir con los lectores a través de las páginas de los libros que tanto disfruta escribiendo e ilustrando. Ha ganado el Premio Lazarillo de Creación Literaria en 2017 y ha sido incluido en la Lista de Honor del IBBY en 2020.

Si deseas conocer más novedades, descúbrelas AQUI

Anaya Infantil y Juvenil
Juan Ignacio Luca de Tena, 15. Madrid. España

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Para más información relativa al tratamiento de sus datos de carácter personal política de privacidad y aviso legal, https://www.anayainfantilyjuvenil.com/aviso-legal/

The Queen’s Death Looks Different From Belfast

The Queen's Death Looks Different From Belfast

Rachel Connolly: There was a boy at my school in Belfast who used to sing a Protestant song on St Patrick's Day every year. I don't remember all the lines, but the chorus went something like: "You can celebrate St Patrick's Day, you can dye the river green, but when the day is over you're still governed by the Queen."

I don't remember this song because it was unusual or transgressive – it was just catchy. This boy certainly wasn't an outlier, a lot of us did things like this; both those from the Catholic community, like me, and those from the Protestant one, like this boy. Northern Ireland was, and is, a deeply sectarian, post-conflict society. I don't think you can blame teenagers in that context for doing things that are stupid or a bit offensive – for not knowing any better, essentially. 

The song is a fairly innocuous (and dare I say camp) example of the kind of cultural signifier I associated with the royal family when I was growing up. To me, it was inextricably linked with Northern Irish Protestantism and unionism, in both its moderate and extreme forms. This was a world of curbstones painted red, white and blue; 12 July bonfires; golf (yes, the sport); Orange Order marches; Ulster rugby; graffiti that says things like 'Kill All Taigs'; the Christmas figurines a good friend of mine had on her family tree that said 'Ulster Says Snow' and 'Snow Surrender'; my own school, which was a Protestant grammar school; stories from family members about terrible things the British army did to poor Catholic communities during the Troubles; slogans like 'Stand Up For The Ulsterman' and 'For God And Ulster'; some of my closest friends; colonialism; Disneyland Florida (which my mum insists is Protestant); and the Democratic Unionist party – in particular, Ian Paisley with his famous refrain: "Never, ever, ever surrender!" 

This list could be a lot longer. But you know what I mean. Or you don't, because you didn't grow up with it, and however well I try to explain it these symbols will be meaningful for me in a way they never will be to you. It's like trying to represent a four-dimensional shape: no construction of lines and intersecting planes can truly account for the difference in conceptual environments. This list could be ten thousand words, a documentary, or a novel. It still wouldn't reflect a culture, with all its nuances, sentimentality and weirdness.

CONTINUE READING ➡︎

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Anti-Monarchy Protesters Keep Getting Arrested

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Campaigners say protests at the coronation of King Charles III will go ahead, despite the risk of arrest. Read more...

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The Royals Are at the Heart of British Capitalism
by Laura Clancy


Are the royals an enthralling soap opera, or an aristocratic vestige of a bygone era? Neither, argues Laura Clancy – the royal Firm is at the heart of British capitalism. Read more...
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