105
edits
mNo edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[File:DSC05528 a.jpg|thumb|800x800px|<small>“Y de mortales engaños, Y de sublimes dolores” exhibition “The Plant Plant” Winterwerkschau Bauhaus University Weimar. 2025.</small>]]''<small>'''...'''</small>'' | [[File:DSC05528 a.jpg|thumb|800x800px|<small>“Y de mortales engaños, Y de sublimes dolores” exhibition “The Plant Plant” Winterwerkschau Bauhaus University Weimar. 2025.</small>]]''<small>'''...'''</small>'' | ||
''<small>'''Yo sé | ''<small>'''Yo sé de nombres extraños'''</small>'' | ||
''<small>'''De las plantas y las flores,'''</small>'' | ''<small>'''De las plantas y las flores,'''</small>'' | ||
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
<small>''And of sublime pains.)''</small> | <small>''And of sublime pains.)''</small> | ||
Line 25: | Line 26: | ||
<small>(José Julián Martí Pérez (Havana, 1853 - Dos Ríos, 1895) was a Cuban politician, diplomat, poet, essayist, journalist and philosopher, founder of the Cuban Revolutionary Party and organizer of the Cuban War of Independence, during which he died in combat. He is considered the initiator of literary modernism in Latin America. He is considered the national hero of the Republic of Cuba, and his ideals of independence and anti-colonialism have been used by the Cuban regime to politically indoctrinate the Cuban people. But these same ideals of nationalism and independence also serve as a guide and inspiration to the opposition that desires a Cuba without repression, a just country and a republic “with everyone and for the good of everyone”).</small> | <small>(José Julián Martí Pérez (Havana, 1853 - Dos Ríos, 1895) was a Cuban politician, diplomat, poet, essayist, journalist and philosopher, founder of the Cuban Revolutionary Party and organizer of the Cuban War of Independence, during which he died in combat. He is considered the initiator of literary modernism in Latin America. He is considered the national hero of the Republic of Cuba, and his ideals of independence and anti-colonialism have been used by the Cuban regime to politically indoctrinate the Cuban people. But these same ideals of nationalism and independence also serve as a guide and inspiration to the opposition that desires a Cuba without repression, a just country and a republic “with everyone and for the good of everyone”).</small> | ||
edits