Humboldt (cultural journal)

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Humboldt

description Culture magazine
language Spanish, Portuguese
First edition 1958
Frequency of publication three times a year
Editor-in-chief Isabel Rith-Magni, Ulrike Prinz
editor Goethe Institute eV
Web link www.goethe.de/humboldt

Humboldt is the Goethe-Institut's cultural magazine , which helps shape and promotes the dialogue between Germany and Latin America as well as Spain and Portugal . Humboldt deals with topics of intellectual and cultural life on both sides of the Atlantic. Each issue is dedicated to a specific focus, including migration , youth , football or religion .

Frequency of publication and distribution

First published in 1958, the publication appears three times a year in two language versions: Spanish and Brazilian Portuguese.

The magazine, which is available free of charge, is intended for cultural institutes, intermediary organizations, libraries and universities who can make it accessible to a wider audience, as well as for people who are active in the cultural or journalistic field and who therefore have a multiplier function.

The magazine is also presented on the Internet. Selected articles from the print edition are available for download online in Spanish, Portuguese and German.

Authors

Numerous authors, intellectuals, artists and photographers from the Latin American and German-speaking areas, as well as international voices, have their say. In recent years, articles by the authors Antonio Skármeta , Guillermo Fadanelli , Wilhelm Genzano , Carlos Franz , Fabio Morábito and pictures by the most important German photographers Andreas Gursky , Thomas Demand and Thomas Struth have been published. In addition, published Partenheimer , Ulrich Beck , Joachim Gauck , Ottmar Ette , Janaína Teles , Elisabeth Jelin , Wolf Biermann and Navid Kermani .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. About Humboldt , accessed on November 23, 2018.