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Culture of Argentina

The culture of Argentina is as varied as the country geography and is composed of a mix of ethnic groups. Modern Argentine culture has been influenced largely by the Spanish colonial period and the 19th/20th century European immigration (mainly Italian and Spanish), and also by Amerindian culture, particularly in the fields of music and art. Buenos Aires, its cultural capital, is largely characterized by both the prevalence of people of Southern European descent, and of European styles in architecture.[1] Museums, cinemas, and galleries are abundant in all of the large urban centers, as well as traditional establishments such as literary bars, or bars offering live music of a variety of music genres.

An Argentine writer reflected on the nature of the culture of Argentina as follows:

With the primitive Hispanic American reality fractured in La Plata Basin due to immigration, its inhabitants have come to be somewhat dual with all the dangers but also with all the advantages of that condition: because of our European roots, we deeply link the nation with the enduring values of the Old World; because of our condition of Americans we link ourselves to the rest of the continent, through the folklore of the interior and the old Castilian that unifies us, feeling somehow the vocation of the Patria Grande San Martín and Bolívar once imagined.

— Ernesto Sabato, La cultura en la encrucijada nacional (1976)[2]

Language edit

The spoken languages of Argentina number at least 40, although Spanish is dominant. Others include native and other immigrant languages; some languages are extinct and others are endangered, spoken by elderly people whose descendants do not speak the languages.[3]

 
Spoken Argentine Spanish about the country's geography.

The most prevalent dialect is Rioplatense, also known as "Argentine Spanish", whose speakers are located primarily in the basin of the Río de la Plata. Argentines are amongst the few Spanish-speaking countries (like Uruguay, Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Honduras) that almost universally use what is known as voseo – the use of the pronoun vos instead of (Spanish for "you").

In many of the central and north-eastern areas of the country, the "rolling r" takes on the same sound as the ll and y ('zh' – a voiced palatal fricative sound, similar to the "s" in the English pronunciation of the word "vision").

The Southern Quechua language is spoken by some 800,000 people, mostly Bolivians immigrants who have arrived in the last years. There are 70,000 estimated speakers in Salta Province. The language is also known as Central Bolivian Quechua, which has six dialects. It is classified as a Quechua II language, and is referred to as Quechua IIC by linguists.[3]

The Guaraní language is also spoken, mainly near the border with Paraguay, and is an co-official language in the province of Corrientes.[4]

The Welsh language is the co-official language of the province of Chubut. This province was strongly influenced by Welsh migration and is home to the largest community outside the British Isles. The language is spoken in the Patagonian Welsh dialect.[5]

Another minority language that arrived with European migration but does not have co-official status is the German language, it is spoken mainly in the provinces of Entre Ríos, Santa Fe, Córdoba, La Pampa, Buenos Aires and Misiones.

Literature edit

 
Argentine literary figures: Julio Cortázar, Victoria Ocampo, Jorge Luis Borges and Adolfo Bioy Casares

Argentina has a detailed literary history, as well as one of the region's most active publishing industries. Argentine writers have figured prominently in Latin American literature, since becoming a fully united entity in the 1850s, with a strong constitution and a defined nation-building plan.[6] The struggle between the Federalists (who favored a loose confederation of provinces based on rural conservatism) and the Unitarians (pro-liberalism and advocates of a strong central government that would encourage European immigration), set the tone for Argentine literature of the time.[7]

The ideological divide between gaucho epic Martín Fierro by José Hernández, and Facundo[8] by Domingo Faustino Sarmiento, is a great example. Hernández, a federalist, was opposed to the centralizing, modernizing, and Europeanizing tendencies. Sarmiento wrote in support of immigration as the only way to save Argentina from becoming subject to the rule of a small number of dictatorial caudillo families, arguing such immigrants would make Argentina more modern and open to Western European influences, and therefore a more prosperous society.[9]

Argentine literature of that period was fiercely nationalist. It was followed by the modernist movement, which emerged in France in the late 19th century, and this period in turn was followed by vanguardism, with Ricardo Güiraldes as an important reference. Jorge Luis Borges, its most acclaimed writer, found new ways of looking at the modern world in metaphor and philosophical debate, and his influence has extended to writers all over the globe. Borges is most famous for his works in short stories such as Ficciones and The Aleph.

Some of the nation's notable writers, poets, and intellectuals include: Juan Bautista Alberdi, Jorge Luis Borges, Roberto Arlt, Enrique Banchs, Adolfo Bioy Casares, Silvina Bullrich, Eugenio Cambaceres, Julio Cortázar, Esteban Echeverría, Leopoldo Lugones, Eduardo Mallea, Ezequiel Martínez Estrada, Tomás Eloy Martínez, Victoria Ocampo, Manuel Puig, Ernesto Sabato, Osvaldo Soriano, Alfonsina Storni, María Elena Walsh and Oliverio Girondo.

Visual arts edit

Painting and sculpture edit

 
The haystacks (1911) by Martín Malharro. He is considered the introducer of Impressionism in Argentina.[10]
 
Marta Minujín's Tower of Babel (2011)

Argentine painters and sculptors have a rich history, dating from both before and since the development of modern Argentina in the second half of the 19th century. Artistic production did not truly come into its own, until after the 1852 overthrow of the repressive regime of Juan Manuel de Rosas. Immigrants like Eduardo Schiaffino, Eduardo Sívori, Reinaldo Giudici, Emilio Caraffa, and Ernesto de la Cárcova left behind a realist heritage influential to this day.[citation needed]

Impressionism did not make itself evident among Argentine artists until after 1900, however, and never acquired the kind of following it did in Europe, though it did inspire influential Argentine post-impressionists such as Martín Malharro, Ramón Silva, Cleto Ciocchini, Fernando Fader, Pío Collivadino, Cesáreo Bernaldo de Quirós, Realism, and aestheticism continued to set the agenda in Argentine painting and sculpture, noteworthy during this era for the sudden fame of sculptor Lola Mora, a student of Auguste Rodin.

As Lola Mora had been until she fell out of favor with local high society, monumental sculptors became in very high demand after 1900, particularly by municipal governments and wealthy families, who competed with each other in boasting the most evocative mausolea for their dearly departed. Though most preferred French and Italian sculptors, work by locals Erminio Blotta, Ángel María de Rosa, and Rogelio Yrurtia resulted in a proliferation of soulful monuments and memorials made them immortal. Not as realist as the work of some of his belle-époque predecessors in sculpture, Yrurtia's subtle impressionism inspired Argentine students like Antonio Pujía, whose internationally prized female torsos always surprise admirers with their whimsical and surreal touches, while Pablo Curatella Manes' sculptures drew from cubism.

 
The frescoed dome of Galerías Pacífico was painted by muralists Berni, Castagnino, Colmeiro, Spilimbergo and Urruchúa.[11]

Becoming an intellectual, as well as artistic circle, painters like Antonio Berni, Lino Enea Spilimbergo, and Juan Carlos Castagnino were friends as well as colleagues, going on to collaborate on masterpieces like the ceiling at the Galerias Pacifico arcade in Buenos Aires, towards 1933.

As in Mexico and elsewhere, muralism became increasingly popular among Argentine artists. Among the first to use his drab surroundings as a canvas was Benito Quinquela Martín, whose vaguely cubist pastel-colored walls painted in his Buenos Aires neighborhood of La Boca during the 1920s and 1930s, have become historical monuments and Argentine cultural emblems, worldwide. Lithographs, likewise, found a following in Argentina sometime after they had been made popular elsewhere. In Argentina, artists like Adolfo Bellocq, used this medium to portray often harsh working conditions in Argentina's growing industrial sector, during the 1920s and 1930s. Antonio Seguí, another lithographer, transferred his naïve style into murals in numerous nations, as did Ricardo Carpani, though in a realist style.[citation needed]

The vanguard in culturally conservative Argentina, futurists and cubists like Xul Solar and Emilio Pettoruti earned a following as considerable as that of less abstract and more sentimental portrait and landscape painters, like Raúl Soldi. Likewise, traditional abstract artists such as Romulo Macció, Anselmo Piccoli, Eduardo Mac Entyre, Luis Felipe Noé, and Luis Seoane co-existed with equal appeal as the most conceptual mobile art creators such as the unpredictable Pérez Celis, Gyula Kosice of the Argentine Madí Movement, and Marta Minujín, one of Andy Warhol's most esteemed fellow Conceptual artists.

The emergence of avant-garde genres in Argentine sculpture also featured Pablo Curatella Manes and Roberto Aizenberg, and constructivists such as Nicolás García Uriburu and Leon Ferrari, one of the world's foremost artists in his genre, today. In the 1960s and 1970s, many of these figures' abstract art found their way into popular advertising and even corporate logos.

Generally possessing a strong sentimental streak, the Argentine public's taste for naïve art and simple pottery cannot be overlooked. Since Prilidiano Pueyrredón's day, artists in the naïve vein like Cándido López have captured the absurdity of war; Susana Aguirre, and Aniko Szabó, the idiosyncrasies of everyday neighborhoods; Guillermo Roux's watercolors, a circus atmosphere; and Gato Frías, childhood memories. Illustrator Florencio Molina Campos's tongue-in-cheek depictions of gaucho life have endured as collectors' items.

To help showcase Argentine and Latin American art and sculpture, local developer and art collector Eduardo Constantini set aside a significant portion of his personal collection, and in 1998, began construction on Buenos Aires' first major institution specializing in works by Latin American artists. His foundation opened the Buenos Aires Museum of Latin American Art (MALBA) in 2001.

Graphic arts edit

 
Florencio Molina Campos, Argentine illustrator and painter.

In the 1920s, Buenos Aires was overflowing with creative drawings and design. Argentine illustrators and sketchers were attracting worldwide recognition, including artists such as Jose Freire Segundo, creator of gráfica of Aikal (1940); Jose Luis Salinas, called upon by King Features to create a comic strip of worldwide fame, Cisco Kid; and Florencio Molina Campos, the brilliant sketcher of the Alpargatas Almanacs of rural life (1930), who collaborated on three Walt Disney films.

The culmination was the arrival, in 1927, of French painter, poster artist and sculptor Lucien Achille Mauzan, who was part of the artistic Art Deco movement. He settled in Buenos Aires and founded his own company Editorial Affiches Mauzan (Editorial Mauzan Posters) and created between 130 and 150 posters in the six years he spent in Argentina. He marks deeply in the poster art in Argentina,[12] where his reputation is enormous.[13] One of his well-known works is the amicably tortured head of Geniol.[14][15]

In the 1950s renowned Uruguayan-Argentine journalist, caricaturist Hermenegildo Sábat, portrayed political figures, as well as artists and other personalities. Many of his "Argentine cultural icons" are reproduced in ceramic tile in the Buenos Aires Underground.

Comics edit

Argentine comics were living its "Golden Age" between the 1940s and the 1960s. Cartoonists and comic creators have contributed prominently to national culture, including Alberto Breccia, Dante Quinterno, Oski, Francisco Solano López, Horacio Altuna, Guillermo Mordillo, Roberto Fontanarrosa, whose grotesque characters captured life's absurdities with quick-witted commentary, and Quino, known for the soup-hating Mafalda, and her comic strip gang of childhood friends, the theorist Oscar Masotta synthesized its contributions in the development of their own models of action comics (Héctor Oesterheld, Hugo Pratt), humor comics (Divito, Quino) and folkloric comics (Walter Ciocca) and the presence of four great artists (José Luis Salinas, Arturo Pérez del Castillo, Hugo Pratt and Alberto Breccia).[16]

Architecture edit

 
 
The Barolo tower, arguably Argentina's best-known Art Nouveau building. Dolfines Guaraní skyscrapers in Rosario, the country's tallest outside Buenos Aires.

The architecture of Argentina can be said to start at the beginning of the Spanish colonization, though it was in the 18th century that the cities of the country reached their splendour. Cities like Córdoba, Salta, Mendoza, and also Buenos Aires conserved most their historical Spanish colonial architecture in spite of their urban growth.

The simplicity of the Rioplatense baroque style can be clearly appreciated in Buenos Aires, in the works of Italian architects such as André Blanqui and Antonio Masella, in the churches of San Ignacio, Nuestra Señora del Pilar, the Cathedral, and the Cabildo.

Italian and French influences increased after the war for independence at the beginning of the 19th century, though the academic style persisted until the first decades of the 20th century. Attempts at renovation took place during the second half of the 19th century and beginning of the 20th, when the European tendencies penetrated into the country, reflected in numerous important buildings of Buenos Aires, such as the Santa Felicitam Church, by Ernesto Bunge; the Central Post Office and Palace of Justice, by Norbert Maillart; and the National Congress and the Colón Opera House, by Vittorio Meano.

 
The Tucumán Government Palace is the executive office building of the Government of the Tucumán Province.

The architecture of the second half of the 20th century continued adapting French neoclassical architecture, such as the headquarters of the National Bank of Argentina, and the NH Gran Hotel Provincial, built by Alejandro Bustillo, and the Museo de Arte Hispano Fernández Blanco, by Martín Noel.

Numerous Argentine architects have enriched their own country's cityscapes, and in recent decades, those around the world. Juan Antonio Buschiazzo helped popularize Beaux-Arts architecture, and Francisco Gianotti combined Art Nouveau with Italianate styles, each adding flair to Argentine cities during the early 20th century. Francisco Salamone and Viktor Sulĉiĉ left an Art Deco legacy, and Alejandro Bustillo created a prolific body of Rationalist architecture. Clorindo Testa introduced Brutalist architecture locally, César Pelli's and Patricio Pouchulu's Futurist creations have graced cities, worldwide. Pelli's 1980s throwbacks to the Art Deco glory of the 1920s, in particular, made him one of the world's most prestigious architects.

Argentina cities have varied architecture. Commonly each house has an individual design, and is very rare to find any tract housing neighborhood.

Another example of Argentine architecture is the Curutchet House, located in La Plata, was designed by the Swiss-French architect Charles-Édouard Jeanneret. In 2016 it was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO.

Popular culture edit

Cinema edit

 
Iconic Argentine actresses in the 1961 Berlin International Film Festival: Isabel Sarli, Olga Zubarry, Tita Merello and Mirtha Legrand

The Argentine film industry created around 170 full-length titles in 2012.[17] The world's first animated feature films were made and released in Argentina, by cartoonist Quirino Cristiani, in 1917 and 1918.[18] Argentine cinema enjoyed a 'golden age' in the 1930s through the 1950s with scores of productions, many now considered classics of Spanish-language film. The industry produced actors who became the first movie stars of Argentine cinema, often tango performers such as Libertad Lamarque, Floren Delbene, Tito Lusiardo, Tita Merello, Roberto Escalada, and Hugo del Carril.

More recent films from the "New Wave" of cinema since the 1980s have achieved worldwide recognition, such as The Official Story (Best foreign film Oscar in 1986), Man Facing Southeast, A Place in the World, Nine Queens, Son of the Bride, The Motorcycle Diaries, Blessed by Fire, The Secret in Their Eyes, winner of the 2009 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, and Wild Tales. Although rarely rivaling Hollywood productions in popularity, local films are released weekly, and widely followed in Argentina and internationally. A number of local films, many of which are low-budget productions, have earned prizes in cinema festivals (such as Cannes), and are promoted by events such as the Mar del Plata Film Festival and the Buenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema.

The per capita number of screens is one of the highest in Latin America, and viewing per capita is the highest in the region.[7] A new generation of Argentine directors have caught the attention of critics worldwide.[19] Cinema is an important facet of local culture, as well as a popular pastime, and levels of cinema attendance are comparable to those of European countries.[20] Argentine composers Luis Bacalov, Gustavo Santaolalla, and Eugenio Zanetti have been honored with Academy Award for Best Original Score nods. Lalo Schifrin has received numerous Grammys, and is best known for the Mission:Impossible theme.

Music edit

 
Carlos Gardel is the most famous representative of Tango.

Tango, the music and lyrics (often sung in a form of slang called lunfardo), is Argentina's musical symbol. The Milonga dance was a predecessor, slowly evolving into modern tango. By the 1930s, tango had changed from a dance-focused music to one of lyric and poetry, with singers such as Carlos Gardel, Hugo del Carril, Roberto Goyeneche, Raúl Lavié, Tita Merello, and Edmundo Rivero. The golden age of tango (1930 to mid-1950s) mirrored that of jazz and swing in the United States, featuring large orchestral groups too, like the bands of Osvaldo Pugliese, Aníbal Troilo, Francisco Canaro, Julio de Caro, and Juan d'Arienzo. Incorporating acoustic music and later, synthesizers into the genre after 1955, bandoneón virtuoso Astor Piazzolla popularized "new tango" creating a more subtle, intellectual and listener-oriented trend. Today, tango enjoys worldwide popularity; ever-evolving, neo-tango is a global phenomenon with renowned groups like Tanghetto, Bajofondo, and the Gotan Project.

 
Known as the "voice of the voiceless ones",[21] Mercedes Sosa was one of the preeminent exponents of nueva canción.

Argentine rock, called rock nacional, is the most popular music among the youth. Arguably the most listened-to form of Spanish-language rock, its influence and international success are owed to a rich, uninterrupted development. Bands such as Soda Stereo or Sumo, and composers like Charly García, Luis Alberto Spinetta, Fito Páez and Andrés Calamaro are referents of national culture. Mid-1960s Buenos Aires and Rosario were cradles of the music, and by 1970, Argentine rock was well established among middle class youth (see: Almendra, Sui Generis, Pappo, Crucis, Pescado Rabioso). Serú Girán bridged the gap into the 1980s, when Argentine bands became popular across Latin America and elsewhere (Enanitos Verdes, Fabulosos Cadillacs and Virus). There are many subgenres: underground, pop-oriented, and some associated with the working class (La Renga, Divididos, Hermética, V8 and Los Redonditos). Current popular bands include Babasónicos, Los Auténticos Decadentes, Rata Blanca, Horcas, Attaque 77, Bersuit, Los Piojos, Catupecu Machu, Carajo and Callejeros.

European classical music is well represented in Argentina. Buenos Aires is home to the world-renowned Colón Theater. Classical musicians, such as Martha Argerich, Eduardo Alonso-Crespo, Daniel Barenboim, Eduardo Delgado, and Alberto Lysy, and classical composers such as Juan José Castro and Alberto Ginastera, and contemporary composers such as Osvaldo Golijov, Gerardo Gandini, and Oscar Edelstein are internationally acclaimed. All major cities in Argentina have impressive theaters or opera houses, and provincial or city orchestras. Some cities have annual events and important classical music festivals like Semana Musical Llao Llao in San Carlos de Bariloche, and the multitudinous Amadeus in Buenos Aires.

 
Payada in a bar. Painting by Carlos Morel.

Argentine folk music is uniquely vast. Beyond dozens of regional dances, a national folk style emerged in the 1930s. Perón's Argentina would give rise to Nueva Canción, as artists began expressing in their music objections to political themes. Atahualpa Yupanqui, folk musician, and Mercedes Sosa would be defining figures in shaping Nueva Canción, gaining worldwide popularity in the process. The style found a huge reception in Chile, where it took off in the 1970s, and went on to influence the entirety of Latin American music.[22] Today, Chango Spasiuk and Soledad Pastorutti have brought folk back to younger generations. León Gieco's folk-rock bridged the gap between Argentine folklore and Argentine rock, introducing both styles to millions overseas in successive tours.

Theater edit

 
The interior of the Teatro Colón.

Buenos Aires is one of the world's great capitals of theater.[7] The Teatro Colón is a national landmark for opera and classical performances; built at the end of the 19th century, its acoustics are considered the best in the world,[1] and is currently undergoing a major refurbishment in order to preserve its outstanding sound characteristics, the French-romantic style, the impressive Golden Room (a minor auditorium targeted to Chamber Music performances), and the museum at the entrance. With its theater scene of national and international caliber, Corrientes Avenue is synonymous with the art. It is thought of as the street that never sleeps, and sometimes referred to as the Broadway of Buenos Aires.[23] Many great careers in acting, music, and film have begun in its many theaters. The Teatro General San Martín is one of the most prestigious, along Corrientes Avenue, and the Teatro Nacional Cervantes functions as the national stage theater of Argentina. The Teatro Argentino de La Plata, El Círculo in Rosario, Independencia in Mendoza, and Libertador in Córdoba are also prominent. Griselda Gambaro, Copi, Roberto Cossa, Marco Denevi, Carlos Gorostiza, and Alberto Vaccarezza are a few of the more prominent Argentine playwrights. Julio Bocca, Jorge Donn, José Neglia, and Norma Fontenla are some of the great ballet dancers of the modern era.

Cuisine edit

 
The asado (1888), by Ignacio Manzoni. Asado is considered a national dish,[24] and is typical of Argentine families to gather on Sundays around one.[25]

Besides many of the pasta, sausage, and dessert dishes common to continental Europe, Argentines enjoy a wide variety of Indigenous and Criollo creations, which include empanadas (a stuffed pastry), locro (a mixture of maize, beans, meat, bacon, onion, and gourd), humitas, and yerba mate, all originally indigenous Amerindian staples, the latter considered Argentina's national beverage. Other popular items include chorizo (a pork sausage), facturas (Viennese-style pastry), dulce de leche, a sort of milk caramel jam and the alfajor.

The Argentine barbecue asado, includes succulent types of meat, among them chorizo, sweetbread, chitterlings, and morcilla (blood sausage). Thin sandwiches, known as sandwiches de miga, are also popular. Argentines have the highest consumption of red meat in the world.[26]

The Argentine wine industry, long among the largest outside Europe, has benefited from growing investment since 1992; in 2007, 60% of foreign investment worldwide in viticulture was destined to Argentina.[27] The country is the fifth most important wine producer in the world,[20] with the annual per capita consumption of wine among the highest. Malbec grape, a discardable varietal in France (country of origin), has found in the Province of Mendoza an ideal environment to successfully develop and turn itself into the world's best Malbec.[27] Mendoza accounts for 70% of the country's total wine production. "Wine tourism" is important in Mendoza province, with the impressive landscape of the Cordillera de Los Andes, and the highest peak in the Americas, Aconcagua (6,952 m (22,808 ft) high) providing a very desirable destination for international tourism.

An event that changed the country's gastronomy was the Great European immigration wave to Argentina, millions of Italians, French, Germans, Spaniards, Poles, Irish, Russians, Welsh, Ukrainians and other groups arrived in the country. This caused gastronomy to change completely, the Fugazzeta, the Milanese, the Croissant, the Gnocchi, among other foods are now part of Argentine culture.

Sports edit

 
 
The national sport of Argentina is the pato but the most popular sport is the football.
 
Lionel Messi is the football player with the most titles in history.

The official national sport of Argentina is pato,[28] although it is not very popular. It is played with a six-handle ball on horseback.

Football is the most popular sport in Argentina.[29] The national football team has won 25 major international titles,[30] including three FIFA World Cups, two Olympic gold medals and 15 Copa América.[31] Over one thousand Argentine players play abroad, the majority of them in European football leagues.[32] There are 331,811 registered football players,[33] with increasing numbers of girls and women, who have organized their own national championships since 1991, and were South American champions in 2006.

The Argentine Football Association (AFA) was formed in 1893, and is the eighth oldest national football association in the world. The AFA today counts 3,377 football clubs,[33] including 20 in the Premier Division. Since the AFA went professional in 1931, fifteen teams have won national tournament titles, including River Plate with 33 and Boca Juniors with 24.[34] Over the last twenty years, futsal and beach football have become increasingly popular. The Argentine national beach football team was one of four competitors in the first international championship for the sport, in Miami in 1993.[35]

Basketball is the second most popular sport; a number of basketball players play in the NBA and European leagues including Emanuel Ginóbili, Andrés Nocioni, Carlos Delfino, Luis Scola, Pablo Prigioni, Juan Ignacio Sánchez and Fabricio Oberto. The national basketball team won the gold medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics and the bronze medal in 2008. Argentina is currently ranked third by the International Basketball Federation.

 
Emanuel Ginóbili, one of the most recognized Argentine basketball players.

Argentina has an important rugby union team, "Los Pumas", with many of its players playing in Europe. Argentina beat host nation France twice in the 2007 Rugby World Cup, placing them third in the competition, and also finished 4th in the 2015 edition of the World Cup. The Pumas are currently ranked fifth in the official world rankings.[36]

Historically, Argentina has had a strong showing within Auto racing. Juan Manuel Fangio was five times Formula One world champion under four different teams, winning 102 of his 184 international races, and is widely ranked as the greatest driver of all time. Other distinguished racers were Oscar Alfredo Gálvez, Juan Gálvez, José Froilán González and Carlos Reutemann.

Field hockey with the national team Las Leonas is one of the world's most successful, with four Olympic medals, two World Cups, a World League and seven Champions Trophy.[37] Luciana Aymar is recognized as the best female player in the history of this sport.

Argentina reigns undisputed in Polo, having won more international championships than any other country and been seldom beaten since the 1930s.[38] The Argentine Polo Championship is the sport's most important international team trophy. The country is home to most of the world's top players, among them Adolfo Cambiaso, the best in Polo history.

Other popular sports include tennis, handball, boxing, volleyball and golf.

The Vamos vamos Argentina chant is a trademark of Argentine fans during sporting events.

Values edit

Argentine values is a shared identity core that brings together actions and thoughts aimed at increasing social capital and fostering the common good among Argentines. As Rokeach state, "Values are the evaluative component of an individual's attitudes and beliefs. Values guide how we think about things in terms of what is right/wrong and correct/incorrect. Values trigger positive or negative emotions. Values also guide our actions "(Neuliep, 2009, p. 66).[39] Argentine Values intends to create a community formed by all those who are convinced that Argentina is a great country. Argentina is a collective country where its values focus on diversity and solidarity.

In addition to being a collectivistic society. The Argentines are from traditional customs, but also kind and friendly. The greeting is a crucial element in the Argentine culture where we see that nobody leaves without being greeted; Men kiss women, Women kiss men, and other men kiss men on the cheek.

Another principal value for Argentines is the family. In Argentina, for example, it is prevalent for family members to visit traditionally on Sunday, meetings in which there are music, food, and games. But apart from these types of meetings, the family almost always meets for family events or gatherings such as births, weddings, and similar activities. For me that I had the experience of living three months in the country, it was very nice to see how generations come together, and "values are transmitted across generations" (Prioste, Narciso, Goncalves, & Pereira, 2017).[40]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Luongo, Michael. Frommer's Argentina. Wiley Publishing, 2007.
  2. ^ Sabato, Ernesto (1976). La cultura en la encrucijada nacional, Buenos Aires: Sudamericana, p. 17–18.
  3. ^ a b Gordon, Raymond G., Jr. (ed.), 2005. Ethnologue: Languages of the World, Fifteenth edition. Dallas, Tex.: SIL International. Online version: Languages of Argentina, Retrieved on 2 January 2007.
  4. ^ Ley Nº 5598 29 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Poder Legislativo de Corrientes, 28 September 2004 (in Spanish)
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  6. ^ Prieto, Martín (2006). Breve historia de la literatura argentina (in Spanish). Taurus. ISBN 978-9870403371.
  7. ^ a b c Wilson, Jason. Cultural Guide to the City of Buenos Aires'. Oxford, England: Signal Books, 1999.
  8. ^ e-libro.net. Free digital books. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 March 2009. (638 KB)
  9. ^ Levene, Ricardo. A history of Argentina. University of Noerth Carolina Press, 1937.
  10. ^ "Martín Malharro. Biografía". buenosaires.gob.ar (in Spanish). Retrieved 14 July 2013.
  11. ^ . galeriaspacifico.com.ar (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 11 July 2013. Retrieved 14 July 2013.
  12. ^ El Buenos Aires que se fue (in Spanish). Retrieved 28 May 2018.
  13. ^ www.fabioares.com El Diseño No Se Mancha (in Spanish). Retrieved on 12 May 2015.
  14. ^ www.worldcat.org Mauzan, Achille 1883–1952 WorldCat Identities. Retrieved on 12 May 2015.
  15. ^ www.OldShopStuff.com History of Enamel Signs in Argentine, advertising (1898–1960). Retrieved on 12 May 2015.
  16. ^ Masotta, Oscar: (1970). La historieta en el mundo moderno. Barcelona: Paidós. p. 144–146.
  17. ^ "Buscar". Cinenacional.com. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  18. ^ "Giannalberto Bendazzi: Quirino Cristiani, The Untold Story of Argentina's Pioneer Animator". Awn.com. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  19. ^ About Gavin Esler's Argentina diary news.bbc.co.uk 3 April 2006.
  20. ^ a b Encyclopædia Britannica, Book of the Year (various issues): statistical appendix.
  21. ^ Singer Mercedes Sosa: The voice of the 'voiceless ones' outlasts South American dictatorships
  22. ^ from http://www.msu.edu/~chapmanb/jara/enueva.html
  23. ^ Adams, Fiona. (2001). Culture Shock Argentina. Portland, Oregon: Graphic Arts Center Publishing Company. ISBN 1-55868-529-4.
  24. ^ "El asado" [The asado]. Vía Restó.com (in Spanish). Buenos Aires: Grupo Clarín. 28 April 2010. Retrieved 29 December 2012. Nacido en el centro de las costumbres gauchas, el asado se impuso como el plato nacional por excelencia.
  25. ^ [Gastronomy] (in Spanish). Argentina.ar. Archived from the original on 17 February 2011. Retrieved 24 July 2013. Son muy comunes –casi mayoritarias- las reuniones en torno a la comida. [...] Las reuniones familiares en domingos generalmente son en torno a un asado o un buen plato de pastas.
  26. ^ "Choices Article – Modern Beef Production in Brazil and Argentina". Choicesmagazine.org. 18 July 2006. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  27. ^ a b "AWPro". Awpro.wordpress.com. 11 June 2008. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  28. ^ . Argentina.ar. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 1 September 2009.
  29. ^ . Argentina.ar. Archived from the original on 23 October 2009. Retrieved 1 September 2009.
  30. ^ . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Archived from the original on 3 June 2007. Retrieved 1 September 2009.
  31. ^ "Brazil is the Champion of America". South American Football Confederation. Retrieved 1 September 2009.[dead link]
  32. ^ . Argentina.ar. Archived from the original on 25 March 2011. Retrieved 1 September 2009.
  33. ^ a b . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Archived from the original on 4 June 2007. Retrieved 1 September 2009.
  34. ^ . Argentine Football Association. Archived from the original on 11 September 2009. Retrieved 1 September 2009.
  35. ^ . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Archived from the original on 26 June 2007. Retrieved 1 September 2009.As of October 2009, Argentina has earned the right to play the 2010 World Cup in South Africa for which it joins Nigeria, Korea Republic and Greece for qualifying in group B.
  36. ^ . irb.com. Archived from the original on 10 August 2011. Retrieved 30 August 2010.
  37. ^ Nauright, John; Parrish, Charles, eds. (2012). Sports around the World: History, Culture, and Practice. Vol. 3. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. p. 11. ISBN 978-1598843019.
  38. ^ Aeberhard, Danny; Benson, Andrew; Phillips, Lucy (2000). The rough guide to Argentina. London: Rough Guides. pp. 50–51. ISBN 978-1-85828-569-6.
  39. ^ Neuliep, J. W. (2009). Intercultural Communication: A Contextual Approach. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
  40. ^ Ana Prioste, Isabel Narciso, Miguel M. Gonçalves & Cícero R. Pereira (2017) Values' family flow: associations between grandparents, parents and adolescent children, Journal of Family Studies, 23:1, 98–117, DOI: 10.1080/13229400.2016.1187659

External links edit

  • ("National System of Cultural Consumption") – Official website. It contains a report of a comprehensive, nationwide statistical study of cultural mores, undertaken in August 2005.

culture, argentina, culture, argentina, varied, country, geography, composed, ethnic, groups, modern, argentine, culture, been, influenced, largely, spanish, colonial, period, 19th, 20th, century, european, immigration, mainly, italian, spanish, also, amerindi. The culture of Argentina is as varied as the country geography and is composed of a mix of ethnic groups Modern Argentine culture has been influenced largely by the Spanish colonial period and the 19th 20th century European immigration mainly Italian and Spanish and also by Amerindian culture particularly in the fields of music and art Buenos Aires its cultural capital is largely characterized by both the prevalence of people of Southern European descent and of European styles in architecture 1 Museums cinemas and galleries are abundant in all of the large urban centers as well as traditional establishments such as literary bars or bars offering live music of a variety of music genres An Argentine writer reflected on the nature of the culture of Argentina as follows With the primitive Hispanic American reality fractured in La Plata Basin due to immigration its inhabitants have come to be somewhat dual with all the dangers but also with all the advantages of that condition because of our European roots we deeply link the nation with the enduring values of the Old World because of our condition of Americans we link ourselves to the rest of the continent through the folklore of the interior and the old Castilian that unifies us feeling somehow the vocation of the Patria Grande San Martin and Bolivar once imagined Ernesto Sabato La cultura en la encrucijada nacional 1976 2 Contents 1 Language 2 Literature 3 Visual arts 3 1 Painting and sculpture 3 2 Graphic arts 3 3 Comics 3 4 Architecture 4 Popular culture 4 1 Cinema 4 2 Music 4 3 Theater 5 Cuisine 6 Sports 7 Values 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksLanguage editMain article Languages of Argentina See also Rioplatense Spanish and List of indigenous languages in Argentina The spoken languages of Argentina number at least 40 although Spanish is dominant Others include native and other immigrant languages some languages are extinct and others are endangered spoken by elderly people whose descendants do not speak the languages 3 nbsp source source Spoken Argentine Spanish about the country s geography The most prevalent dialect is Rioplatense also known as Argentine Spanish whose speakers are located primarily in the basin of the Rio de la Plata Argentines are amongst the few Spanish speaking countries like Uruguay Nicaragua El Salvador and Honduras that almost universally use what is known as voseo the use of the pronoun vos instead of tu Spanish for you In many of the central and north eastern areas of the country the rolling r takes on the same sound as the ll and y zh a voiced palatal fricative sound similar to the s in the English pronunciation of the word vision The Southern Quechua language is spoken by some 800 000 people mostly Bolivians immigrants who have arrived in the last years There are 70 000 estimated speakers in Salta Province The language is also known as Central Bolivian Quechua which has six dialects It is classified as a Quechua II language and is referred to as Quechua IIC by linguists 3 The Guarani language is also spoken mainly near the border with Paraguay and is an co official language in the province of Corrientes 4 The Welsh language is the co official language of the province of Chubut This province was strongly influenced by Welsh migration and is home to the largest community outside the British Isles The language is spoken in the Patagonian Welsh dialect 5 Another minority language that arrived with European migration but does not have co official status is the German language it is spoken mainly in the provinces of Entre Rios Santa Fe Cordoba La Pampa Buenos Aires and Misiones Literature editMain article Argentine literature nbsp Argentine literary figures Julio Cortazar Victoria Ocampo Jorge Luis Borges and Adolfo Bioy CasaresArgentina has a detailed literary history as well as one of the region s most active publishing industries Argentine writers have figured prominently in Latin American literature since becoming a fully united entity in the 1850s with a strong constitution and a defined nation building plan 6 The struggle between the Federalists who favored a loose confederation of provinces based on rural conservatism and the Unitarians pro liberalism and advocates of a strong central government that would encourage European immigration set the tone for Argentine literature of the time 7 The ideological divide between gaucho epic Martin Fierro by Jose Hernandez and Facundo 8 by Domingo Faustino Sarmiento is a great example Hernandez a federalist was opposed to the centralizing modernizing and Europeanizing tendencies Sarmiento wrote in support of immigration as the only way to save Argentina from becoming subject to the rule of a small number of dictatorial caudillo families arguing such immigrants would make Argentina more modern and open to Western European influences and therefore a more prosperous society 9 Argentine literature of that period was fiercely nationalist It was followed by the modernist movement which emerged in France in the late 19th century and this period in turn was followed by vanguardism with Ricardo Guiraldes as an important reference Jorge Luis Borges its most acclaimed writer found new ways of looking at the modern world in metaphor and philosophical debate and his influence has extended to writers all over the globe Borges is most famous for his works in short stories such as Ficciones and The Aleph Some of the nation s notable writers poets and intellectuals include Juan Bautista Alberdi Jorge Luis Borges Roberto Arlt Enrique Banchs Adolfo Bioy Casares Silvina Bullrich Eugenio Cambaceres Julio Cortazar Esteban Echeverria Leopoldo Lugones Eduardo Mallea Ezequiel Martinez Estrada Tomas Eloy Martinez Victoria Ocampo Manuel Puig Ernesto Sabato Osvaldo Soriano Alfonsina Storni Maria Elena Walsh and Oliverio Girondo Visual arts editPainting and sculpture edit Main article Argentine painting nbsp The haystacks 1911 by Martin Malharro He is considered the introducer of Impressionism in Argentina 10 nbsp Marta Minujin s Tower of Babel 2011 Argentine painters and sculptors have a rich history dating from both before and since the development of modern Argentina in the second half of the 19th century Artistic production did not truly come into its own until after the 1852 overthrow of the repressive regime of Juan Manuel de Rosas Immigrants like Eduardo Schiaffino Eduardo Sivori Reinaldo Giudici Emilio Caraffa and Ernesto de la Carcova left behind a realist heritage influential to this day citation needed Impressionism did not make itself evident among Argentine artists until after 1900 however and never acquired the kind of following it did in Europe though it did inspire influential Argentine post impressionists such as Martin Malharro Ramon Silva Cleto Ciocchini Fernando Fader Pio Collivadino Cesareo Bernaldo de Quiros Realism and aestheticism continued to set the agenda in Argentine painting and sculpture noteworthy during this era for the sudden fame of sculptor Lola Mora a student of Auguste Rodin As Lola Mora had been until she fell out of favor with local high society monumental sculptors became in very high demand after 1900 particularly by municipal governments and wealthy families who competed with each other in boasting the most evocative mausolea for their dearly departed Though most preferred French and Italian sculptors work by locals Erminio Blotta Angel Maria de Rosa and Rogelio Yrurtia resulted in a proliferation of soulful monuments and memorials made them immortal Not as realist as the work of some of his belle epoque predecessors in sculpture Yrurtia s subtle impressionism inspired Argentine students like Antonio Pujia whose internationally prized female torsos always surprise admirers with their whimsical and surreal touches while Pablo Curatella Manes sculptures drew from cubism nbsp The frescoed dome of Galerias Pacifico was painted by muralists Berni Castagnino Colmeiro Spilimbergo and Urruchua 11 Becoming an intellectual as well as artistic circle painters like Antonio Berni Lino Enea Spilimbergo and Juan Carlos Castagnino were friends as well as colleagues going on to collaborate on masterpieces like the ceiling at the Galerias Pacifico arcade in Buenos Aires towards 1933 As in Mexico and elsewhere muralism became increasingly popular among Argentine artists Among the first to use his drab surroundings as a canvas was Benito Quinquela Martin whose vaguely cubist pastel colored walls painted in his Buenos Aires neighborhood of La Boca during the 1920s and 1930s have become historical monuments and Argentine cultural emblems worldwide Lithographs likewise found a following in Argentina sometime after they had been made popular elsewhere In Argentina artists like Adolfo Bellocq used this medium to portray often harsh working conditions in Argentina s growing industrial sector during the 1920s and 1930s Antonio Segui another lithographer transferred his naive style into murals in numerous nations as did Ricardo Carpani though in a realist style citation needed The vanguard in culturally conservative Argentina futurists and cubists like Xul Solar and Emilio Pettoruti earned a following as considerable as that of less abstract and more sentimental portrait and landscape painters like Raul Soldi Likewise traditional abstract artists such as Romulo Maccio Anselmo Piccoli Eduardo Mac Entyre Luis Felipe Noe and Luis Seoane co existed with equal appeal as the most conceptual mobile art creators such as the unpredictable Perez Celis Gyula Kosice of the Argentine Madi Movement and Marta Minujin one of Andy Warhol s most esteemed fellow Conceptual artists The emergence of avant garde genres in Argentine sculpture also featured Pablo Curatella Manes and Roberto Aizenberg and constructivists such as Nicolas Garcia Uriburu and Leon Ferrari one of the world s foremost artists in his genre today In the 1960s and 1970s many of these figures abstract art found their way into popular advertising and even corporate logos Generally possessing a strong sentimental streak the Argentine public s taste for naive art and simple pottery cannot be overlooked Since Prilidiano Pueyrredon s day artists in the naive vein like Candido Lopez have captured the absurdity of war Susana Aguirre and Aniko Szabo the idiosyncrasies of everyday neighborhoods Guillermo Roux s watercolors a circus atmosphere and Gato Frias childhood memories Illustrator Florencio Molina Campos s tongue in cheek depictions of gaucho life have endured as collectors items To help showcase Argentine and Latin American art and sculpture local developer and art collector Eduardo Constantini set aside a significant portion of his personal collection and in 1998 began construction on Buenos Aires first major institution specializing in works by Latin American artists His foundation opened the Buenos Aires Museum of Latin American Art MALBA in 2001 Graphic arts edit nbsp Florencio Molina Campos Argentine illustrator and painter In the 1920s Buenos Aires was overflowing with creative drawings and design Argentine illustrators and sketchers were attracting worldwide recognition including artists such as Jose Freire Segundo creator of grafica of Aikal 1940 Jose Luis Salinas called upon by King Features to create a comic strip of worldwide fame Cisco Kid and Florencio Molina Campos the brilliant sketcher of the Alpargatas Almanacs of rural life 1930 who collaborated on three Walt Disney films The culmination was the arrival in 1927 of French painter poster artist and sculptor Lucien Achille Mauzan who was part of the artistic Art Deco movement He settled in Buenos Aires and founded his own company Editorial Affiches Mauzan Editorial Mauzan Posters and created between 130 and 150 posters in the six years he spent in Argentina He marks deeply in the poster art in Argentina 12 where his reputation is enormous 13 One of his well known works is the amicably tortured head of Geniol 14 15 In the 1950s renowned Uruguayan Argentine journalist caricaturist Hermenegildo Sabat portrayed political figures as well as artists and other personalities Many of his Argentine cultural icons are reproduced in ceramic tile in the Buenos Aires Underground Comics edit Main article Argentine comics Argentine comics were living its Golden Age between the 1940s and the 1960s Cartoonists and comic creators have contributed prominently to national culture including Alberto Breccia Dante Quinterno Oski Francisco Solano Lopez Horacio Altuna Guillermo Mordillo Roberto Fontanarrosa whose grotesque characters captured life s absurdities with quick witted commentary and Quino known for the soup hating Mafalda and her comic strip gang of childhood friends the theorist Oscar Masotta synthesized its contributions in the development of their own models of action comics Hector Oesterheld Hugo Pratt humor comics Divito Quino and folkloric comics Walter Ciocca and the presence of four great artists Jose Luis Salinas Arturo Perez del Castillo Hugo Pratt and Alberto Breccia 16 Architecture edit Main article Architecture of Argentina nbsp nbsp The Barolo tower arguably Argentina s best known Art Nouveau building Dolfines Guarani skyscrapers in Rosario the country s tallest outside Buenos Aires The architecture of Argentina can be said to start at the beginning of the Spanish colonization though it was in the 18th century that the cities of the country reached their splendour Cities like Cordoba Salta Mendoza and also Buenos Aires conserved most their historical Spanish colonial architecture in spite of their urban growth The simplicity of the Rioplatense baroque style can be clearly appreciated in Buenos Aires in the works of Italian architects such as Andre Blanqui and Antonio Masella in the churches of San Ignacio Nuestra Senora del Pilar the Cathedral and the Cabildo Italian and French influences increased after the war for independence at the beginning of the 19th century though the academic style persisted until the first decades of the 20th century Attempts at renovation took place during the second half of the 19th century and beginning of the 20th when the European tendencies penetrated into the country reflected in numerous important buildings of Buenos Aires such as the Santa Felicitam Church by Ernesto Bunge the Central Post Office and Palace of Justice by Norbert Maillart and the National Congress and the Colon Opera House by Vittorio Meano nbsp The Tucuman Government Palace is the executive office building of the Government of the Tucuman Province The architecture of the second half of the 20th century continued adapting French neoclassical architecture such as the headquarters of the National Bank of Argentina and the NH Gran Hotel Provincial built by Alejandro Bustillo and the Museo de Arte Hispano Fernandez Blanco by Martin Noel Numerous Argentine architects have enriched their own country s cityscapes and in recent decades those around the world Juan Antonio Buschiazzo helped popularize Beaux Arts architecture and Francisco Gianotti combined Art Nouveau with Italianate styles each adding flair to Argentine cities during the early 20th century Francisco Salamone and Viktor Sulĉiĉ left an Art Deco legacy and Alejandro Bustillo created a prolific body of Rationalist architecture Clorindo Testa introduced Brutalist architecture locally Cesar Pelli s and Patricio Pouchulu s Futurist creations have graced cities worldwide Pelli s 1980s throwbacks to the Art Deco glory of the 1920s in particular made him one of the world s most prestigious architects Argentina cities have varied architecture Commonly each house has an individual design and is very rare to find any tract housing neighborhood Another example of Argentine architecture is the Curutchet House located in La Plata was designed by the Swiss French architect Charles Edouard Jeanneret In 2016 it was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO Popular culture editCinema edit Main article Cinema of Argentina nbsp Iconic Argentine actresses in the 1961 Berlin International Film Festival Isabel Sarli Olga Zubarry Tita Merello and Mirtha LegrandThe Argentine film industry created around 170 full length titles in 2012 17 The world s first animated feature films were made and released in Argentina by cartoonist Quirino Cristiani in 1917 and 1918 18 Argentine cinema enjoyed a golden age in the 1930s through the 1950s with scores of productions many now considered classics of Spanish language film The industry produced actors who became the first movie stars of Argentine cinema often tango performers such as Libertad Lamarque Floren Delbene Tito Lusiardo Tita Merello Roberto Escalada and Hugo del Carril More recent films from the New Wave of cinema since the 1980s have achieved worldwide recognition such as The Official Story Best foreign film Oscar in 1986 Man Facing Southeast A Place in the World Nine Queens Son of the Bride The Motorcycle Diaries Blessed by Fire The Secret in Their Eyes winner of the 2009 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film and Wild Tales Although rarely rivaling Hollywood productions in popularity local films are released weekly and widely followed in Argentina and internationally A number of local films many of which are low budget productions have earned prizes in cinema festivals such as Cannes and are promoted by events such as the Mar del Plata Film Festival and the Buenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema The per capita number of screens is one of the highest in Latin America and viewing per capita is the highest in the region 7 A new generation of Argentine directors have caught the attention of critics worldwide 19 Cinema is an important facet of local culture as well as a popular pastime and levels of cinema attendance are comparable to those of European countries 20 Argentine composers Luis Bacalov Gustavo Santaolalla and Eugenio Zanetti have been honored with Academy Award for Best Original Score nods Lalo Schifrin has received numerous Grammys and is best known for the Mission Impossible theme Music edit Main articles Music of Argentina and History of folkloric music in Argentina nbsp Carlos Gardel is the most famous representative of Tango Tango the music and lyrics often sung in a form of slang called lunfardo is Argentina s musical symbol The Milonga dance was a predecessor slowly evolving into modern tango By the 1930s tango had changed from a dance focused music to one of lyric and poetry with singers such as Carlos Gardel Hugo del Carril Roberto Goyeneche Raul Lavie Tita Merello and Edmundo Rivero The golden age of tango 1930 to mid 1950s mirrored that of jazz and swing in the United States featuring large orchestral groups too like the bands of Osvaldo Pugliese Anibal Troilo Francisco Canaro Julio de Caro and Juan d Arienzo Incorporating acoustic music and later synthesizers into the genre after 1955 bandoneon virtuoso Astor Piazzolla popularized new tango creating a more subtle intellectual and listener oriented trend Today tango enjoys worldwide popularity ever evolving neo tango is a global phenomenon with renowned groups like Tanghetto Bajofondo and the Gotan Project nbsp Known as the voice of the voiceless ones 21 Mercedes Sosa was one of the preeminent exponents of nueva cancion Argentine rock called rock nacional is the most popular music among the youth Arguably the most listened to form of Spanish language rock its influence and international success are owed to a rich uninterrupted development Bands such as Soda Stereo or Sumo and composers like Charly Garcia Luis Alberto Spinetta Fito Paez and Andres Calamaro are referents of national culture Mid 1960s Buenos Aires and Rosario were cradles of the music and by 1970 Argentine rock was well established among middle class youth see Almendra Sui Generis Pappo Crucis Pescado Rabioso Seru Giran bridged the gap into the 1980s when Argentine bands became popular across Latin America and elsewhere Enanitos Verdes Fabulosos Cadillacs and Virus There are many subgenres underground pop oriented and some associated with the working class La Renga Divididos Hermetica V8 and Los Redonditos Current popular bands include Babasonicos Los Autenticos Decadentes Rata Blanca Horcas Attaque 77 Bersuit Los Piojos Catupecu Machu Carajo and Callejeros European classical music is well represented in Argentina Buenos Aires is home to the world renowned Colon Theater Classical musicians such as Martha Argerich Eduardo Alonso Crespo Daniel Barenboim Eduardo Delgado and Alberto Lysy and classical composers such as Juan Jose Castro and Alberto Ginastera and contemporary composers such as Osvaldo Golijov Gerardo Gandini and Oscar Edelstein are internationally acclaimed All major cities in Argentina have impressive theaters or opera houses and provincial or city orchestras Some cities have annual events and important classical music festivals like Semana Musical Llao Llao in San Carlos de Bariloche and the multitudinous Amadeus in Buenos Aires nbsp Payada in a bar Painting by Carlos Morel Argentine folk music is uniquely vast Beyond dozens of regional dances a national folk style emerged in the 1930s Peron s Argentina would give rise to Nueva Cancion as artists began expressing in their music objections to political themes Atahualpa Yupanqui folk musician and Mercedes Sosa would be defining figures in shaping Nueva Cancion gaining worldwide popularity in the process The style found a huge reception in Chile where it took off in the 1970s and went on to influence the entirety of Latin American music 22 Today Chango Spasiuk and Soledad Pastorutti have brought folk back to younger generations Leon Gieco s folk rock bridged the gap between Argentine folklore and Argentine rock introducing both styles to millions overseas in successive tours Theater edit Main article Theater in Argentina nbsp The interior of the Teatro Colon Buenos Aires is one of the world s great capitals of theater 7 The Teatro Colon is a national landmark for opera and classical performances built at the end of the 19th century its acoustics are considered the best in the world 1 and is currently undergoing a major refurbishment in order to preserve its outstanding sound characteristics the French romantic style the impressive Golden Room a minor auditorium targeted to Chamber Music performances and the museum at the entrance With its theater scene of national and international caliber Corrientes Avenue is synonymous with the art It is thought of as the street that never sleeps and sometimes referred to as the Broadway of Buenos Aires 23 Many great careers in acting music and film have begun in its many theaters The Teatro General San Martin is one of the most prestigious along Corrientes Avenue and the Teatro Nacional Cervantes functions as the national stage theater of Argentina The Teatro Argentino de La Plata El Circulo in Rosario Independencia in Mendoza and Libertador in Cordoba are also prominent Griselda Gambaro Copi Roberto Cossa Marco Denevi Carlos Gorostiza and Alberto Vaccarezza are a few of the more prominent Argentine playwrights Julio Bocca Jorge Donn Jose Neglia and Norma Fontenla are some of the great ballet dancers of the modern era Cuisine editMain article Argentine cuisine nbsp The asado 1888 by Ignacio Manzoni Asado is considered a national dish 24 and is typical of Argentine families to gather on Sundays around one 25 Besides many of the pasta sausage and dessert dishes common to continental Europe Argentines enjoy a wide variety of Indigenous and Criollo creations which include empanadas a stuffed pastry locro a mixture of maize beans meat bacon onion and gourd humitas and yerba mate all originally indigenous Amerindian staples the latter considered Argentina s national beverage Other popular items include chorizo a pork sausage facturas Viennese style pastry dulce de leche a sort of milk caramel jam and the alfajor The Argentine barbecue asado includes succulent types of meat among them chorizo sweetbread chitterlings and morcilla blood sausage Thin sandwiches known as sandwiches de miga are also popular Argentines have the highest consumption of red meat in the world 26 The Argentine wine industry long among the largest outside Europe has benefited from growing investment since 1992 in 2007 60 of foreign investment worldwide in viticulture was destined to Argentina 27 The country is the fifth most important wine producer in the world 20 with the annual per capita consumption of wine among the highest Malbec grape a discardable varietal in France country of origin has found in the Province of Mendoza an ideal environment to successfully develop and turn itself into the world s best Malbec 27 Mendoza accounts for 70 of the country s total wine production Wine tourism is important in Mendoza province with the impressive landscape of the Cordillera de Los Andes and the highest peak in the Americas Aconcagua 6 952 m 22 808 ft high providing a very desirable destination for international tourism An event that changed the country s gastronomy was the Great European immigration wave to Argentina millions of Italians French Germans Spaniards Poles Irish Russians Welsh Ukrainians and other groups arrived in the country This caused gastronomy to change completely the Fugazzeta the Milanese the Croissant the Gnocchi among other foods are now part of Argentine culture Sports editMain article Sport in Argentina nbsp nbsp The national sport of Argentina is the pato but the most popular sport is the football nbsp Lionel Messi is the football player with the most titles in history The official national sport of Argentina is pato 28 although it is not very popular It is played with a six handle ball on horseback Football is the most popular sport in Argentina 29 The national football team has won 25 major international titles 30 including three FIFA World Cups two Olympic gold medals and 15 Copa America 31 Over one thousand Argentine players play abroad the majority of them in European football leagues 32 There are 331 811 registered football players 33 with increasing numbers of girls and women who have organized their own national championships since 1991 and were South American champions in 2006 The Argentine Football Association AFA was formed in 1893 and is the eighth oldest national football association in the world The AFA today counts 3 377 football clubs 33 including 20 in the Premier Division Since the AFA went professional in 1931 fifteen teams have won national tournament titles including River Plate with 33 and Boca Juniors with 24 34 Over the last twenty years futsal and beach football have become increasingly popular The Argentine national beach football team was one of four competitors in the first international championship for the sport in Miami in 1993 35 Basketball is the second most popular sport a number of basketball players play in the NBA and European leagues including Emanuel Ginobili Andres Nocioni Carlos Delfino Luis Scola Pablo Prigioni Juan Ignacio Sanchez and Fabricio Oberto The national basketball team won the gold medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics and the bronze medal in 2008 Argentina is currently ranked third by the International Basketball Federation nbsp Emanuel Ginobili one of the most recognized Argentine basketball players Argentina has an important rugby union team Los Pumas with many of its players playing in Europe Argentina beat host nation France twice in the 2007 Rugby World Cup placing them third in the competition and also finished 4th in the 2015 edition of the World Cup The Pumas are currently ranked fifth in the official world rankings 36 Historically Argentina has had a strong showing within Auto racing Juan Manuel Fangio was five times Formula One world champion under four different teams winning 102 of his 184 international races and is widely ranked as the greatest driver of all time Other distinguished racers were Oscar Alfredo Galvez Juan Galvez Jose Froilan Gonzalez and Carlos Reutemann Field hockey with the national team Las Leonas is one of the world s most successful with four Olympic medals two World Cups a World League and seven Champions Trophy 37 Luciana Aymar is recognized as the best female player in the history of this sport Argentina reigns undisputed in Polo having won more international championships than any other country and been seldom beaten since the 1930s 38 The Argentine Polo Championship is the sport s most important international team trophy The country is home to most of the world s top players among them Adolfo Cambiaso the best in Polo history Other popular sports include tennis handball boxing volleyball and golf The Vamos vamos Argentina chant is a trademark of Argentine fans during sporting events Values editThis section is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Argentine values is a shared identity core that brings together actions and thoughts aimed at increasing social capital and fostering the common good among Argentines As Rokeach state Values are the evaluative component of an individual s attitudes and beliefs Values guide how we think about things in terms of what is right wrong and correct incorrect Values trigger positive or negative emotions Values also guide our actions Neuliep 2009 p 66 39 Argentine Values intends to create a community formed by all those who are convinced that Argentina is a great country Argentina is a collective country where its values focus on diversity and solidarity In addition to being a collectivistic society The Argentines are from traditional customs but also kind and friendly The greeting is a crucial element in the Argentine culture where we see that nobody leaves without being greeted Men kiss women Women kiss men and other men kiss men on the cheek Another principal value for Argentines is the family In Argentina for example it is prevalent for family members to visit traditionally on Sunday meetings in which there are music food and games But apart from these types of meetings the family almost always meets for family events or gatherings such as births weddings and similar activities For me that I had the experience of living three months in the country it was very nice to see how generations come together and values are transmitted across generations Prioste Narciso Goncalves amp Pereira 2017 40 See also editArgentine tea culture Colon Theater Ballet Football in Argentina Tango dance References edit a b Luongo Michael Frommer s Argentina Wiley Publishing 2007 Sabato Ernesto 1976 La cultura en la encrucijada nacional Buenos Aires Sudamericana p 17 18 a b Gordon Raymond G Jr ed 2005 Ethnologue Languages of the World Fifteenth edition Dallas Tex SIL International Online version Languages of Argentina Retrieved on 2 January 2007 Ley Nº 5598 Archived 29 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Poder Legislativo de Corrientes 28 September 2004 in Spanish Copia archivada Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 29 April 2012 Prieto Martin 2006 Breve historia de la literatura argentina in Spanish Taurus ISBN 978 9870403371 a b c Wilson Jason Cultural Guide to the City of Buenos Aires Oxford England Signal Books 1999 e libro net Free digital books Facundo PDF Archived from the original PDF on 25 March 2009 638 KB Levene Ricardo A history of Argentina University of Noerth Carolina Press 1937 Martin Malharro Biografia buenosaires gob ar in Spanish Retrieved 14 July 2013 Historia de los murales galeriaspacifico com ar in Spanish Archived from the original on 11 July 2013 Retrieved 14 July 2013 El Buenos Aires que se fue in Spanish Retrieved 28 May 2018 www fabioares com El Diseno No Se Mancha in Spanish Retrieved on 12 May 2015 www worldcat org Mauzan Achille 1883 1952 WorldCat Identities Retrieved on 12 May 2015 www OldShopStuff com History of Enamel Signs in Argentine advertising 1898 1960 Retrieved on 12 May 2015 Masotta Oscar 1970 La historieta en el mundo moderno Barcelona Paidos p 144 146 Buscar Cinenacional com Retrieved 5 October 2013 Giannalberto Bendazzi Quirino Cristiani The Untold Story of Argentina s Pioneer Animator Awn com Retrieved 25 April 2010 About Gavin Esler s Argentina diary news bbc co uk 3 April 2006 a b Encyclopaedia Britannica Book of the Year various issues statistical appendix Singer Mercedes Sosa The voice of the voiceless ones outlasts South American dictatorships Music El Derecho de vivir en paz from http www msu edu chapmanb jara enueva html Adams Fiona 2001 Culture Shock Argentina Portland Oregon Graphic Arts Center Publishing Company ISBN 1 55868 529 4 El asado The asado Via Resto com in Spanish Buenos Aires Grupo Clarin 28 April 2010 Retrieved 29 December 2012 Nacido en el centro de las costumbres gauchas el asado se impuso como el plato nacional por excelencia Gastronomia Gastronomy in Spanish Argentina ar Archived from the original on 17 February 2011 Retrieved 24 July 2013 Son muy comunes casi mayoritarias las reuniones en torno a la comida Las reuniones familiares en domingos generalmente son en torno a un asado o un buen plato de pastas Choices Article Modern Beef Production in Brazil and Argentina Choicesmagazine org 18 July 2006 Retrieved 25 April 2010 a b AWPro Awpro wordpress com 11 June 2008 Retrieved 25 April 2010 Pato Argentina s national sport Argentina ar Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 1 September 2009 Argentine sport Argentina ar Archived from the original on 23 October 2009 Retrieved 1 September 2009 Argentina Federation Internationale de Football Association Archived from the original on 3 June 2007 Retrieved 1 September 2009 Brazil is the Champion of America South American Football Confederation Retrieved 1 September 2009 dead link Argentine soccer players exported abroad Argentina ar Archived from the original on 25 March 2011 Retrieved 1 September 2009 a b Argentina country information Federation Internationale de Football Association Archived from the original on 4 June 2007 Retrieved 1 September 2009 Primera Division Campeones Argentine Football Association Archived from the original on 11 September 2009 Retrieved 1 September 2009 History of beach soccer Federation Internationale de Football Association Archived from the original on 26 June 2007 Retrieved 1 September 2009 As of October 2009 Argentina has earned the right to play the 2010 World Cup in South Africa for which it joins Nigeria Korea Republic and Greece for qualifying in group B World Rankings irb com Archived from the original on 10 August 2011 Retrieved 30 August 2010 Nauright John Parrish Charles eds 2012 Sports around the World History Culture and Practice Vol 3 Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO p 11 ISBN 978 1598843019 Aeberhard Danny Benson Andrew Phillips Lucy 2000 The rough guide to Argentina London Rough Guides pp 50 51 ISBN 978 1 85828 569 6 Neuliep J W 2009 Intercultural Communication A Contextual Approach Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications Ana Prioste Isabel Narciso Miguel M Goncalves amp Cicero R Pereira 2017 Values family flow associations between grandparents parents and adolescent children Journal of Family Studies 23 1 98 117 DOI 10 1080 13229400 2016 1187659External links editSistema Nacional de Consumos Culturales National System of Cultural Consumption Official website It contains a report of a comprehensive nationwide statistical study of cultural mores undertaken in August 2005 Argentine Culture Riches and Diversity Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Culture of Argentina amp oldid 1215516036, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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