From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Espacio Carta Abierta or Carta Abierta (English:
Open Letter Spot ) is a group of
Argentine
intellectuals who formed in March 2008 in defense of the
Cristina Fernández de Kirchner government, which was facing a
conflict with the agricultural sector .
Members of Espacio Carta Abierta made their first public appearance on 13 May of the same year in the Gandhi library,
[1] in
Buenos Aires , present were
Horacio Verbitsky ,
Nicolás Casullo ,
Ricardo Forster and
Jaime Sorín . This was where they presented their first open letter, which was signed by more than 750 intellectuals and
artists .
Some of the Members are:
Federico Andahazi , writer
Cristina Banegas , actress
Fernando Birri , film director
Jorge Boccanera , poet and journalist
Rodolfo Braceli , writer
Sergio Caletti , journalist
Manuel Callau , actor
Nicolás Casullo , writer and philosopher
Patricio Contreras , actor chileno-argentino.
Roberto Tito Cossa , actor and theater director
Jorge Dubatti , crítico teatral and historian
José Pablo Feinmann , writer and philosopher
León Ferrari , painter
Horacio Fontova , musician and actor
Juan Forn , writer
Ricardo Forster , philosopher and essayist
María José Gabin , actress
Jorge Gaggero , film director
Norberto Galasso , historian
Néstor García Canclini , anthropologist
Juan Gelman , poet
Octavio Getino , film director, narrador e investigador de medios de comunicación
Julio Godio , sociologist
Horacio González , sociologist, ex director de la
Biblioteca Nacional Argentina .
Eduardo Grüner , essayist
Ricardo Halac , journalist and essayist
Liliana Heker , writer, cuentista, novelista and Argentinian essayist.
Carlos Heller , cooperativista, fundador y presidente del
Banco Credicoop , diputado nacional
Noé Jitrik , literary critic
Eduardo Jozami , journalist, writer, activista, director del
Centro Cultural de la Memoria «Haroldo Conti»
Mauricio Kartún , dramaturgo and theater director
Alejandro Kaufman , professor, crítico cultural and essayist
Ernesto Laclau , political scientist and professor
María Pía López (1969-), congresswoman
Guillermo Mastrini (1967-), researcher and professor
Mariana Moyano , journalist and professor
Vicente Muleiro , journalist
Luis Felipe Noé , artist
José Nun , secretario de Cultura de la Nación
Enrique Oteiza , engineer and professor
Eduardo Tato Pavlovsky , psicoanalista, psicoterapeuta y actor
Joan Prim, poet, musician, painter
Adriana Puiggrós , politician and pedagogue
Sergio Pujol , historian
Lorenzo Quinteros , actor
Eduardo Rinesi , philosopher and political scientist
Guillermo Saccomanno , writer
Federico Schuster , philosopher and professor (decano de Ciencias Sociales)
Jaime Sorín , architect and dean of Facultad de Arquitectura
Rodolfo Hamawi editor
Cristina Bejar psychologist
Oscar Steimberg , semiologist and writer
Gustavo Varela , philosopher
Horacio Verbitsky , journalist
Laura Yusem , theater director and professor
They self-define as
nonpartisan , though they have been criticized for this assertion[
by whom? ] .
[2]
Criticism
They are accused to be an organic group that adheres politically to
Cristina Fernández party , attack that relies on the fact that the group includes some State officials.
Grupo Aurora
A group of intellectuals called "Grupo Aurora" appeared in July of the next year. It was strongly critic of the government, and therefore they were an opposition organism of Carta Abierta.
[3]
Members:
References
^
"Carta Abierta / 1" , Página/12 , Retrieved 2 February 2013 (in Spanish)
^
"Quienes somos"
Archived 1 February 2013 at the
Wayback Machine , Espacio Carta Abierta , Retrieved February 2, 2013 (in Spanish)
^ VENERANDA, Marcelo,
"Nació Aurora, un grupo intelectual crítico del Gobierno" , lanacion.com , Retrieved February 2, 2013 (in Spanish)