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Puntata a cura di Untimoteo.La notizia è doppia: mentre procede la produzione - firmata Netflix Argentina - di una serie TV ispirata al classico fantascientifico El Eternauta, l'opera originaria torna disponibile in Italia grazie a una nuova edizione pubblicata da Panini Comics. Pubblicata a puntate a partire dal 1959 sulla rivista Hora Cero, la serie a fumetti scritta da Hector German Oesterheld e disegnata da Francisco Solano Lopez rappresenta un esempio straordinario di come si possa fare una narrazione sociale e politica sublimando gli schemi narrativi della science fiction.L'Eternauta è un'opera passata alla storia sia per l'eccezionale qualità che per i tristi presagi che si sarebbero avverati a distanza di pochi anni. Dietro la metafora dell'invasione aliena di Buenos Aires Oesterheld nasconde la propria cupa e profetica visione politica sul destino del Sudamerica...“Fumetto” è il formato del podcast di Mondoserie dedicato al mondo dei fumetti. Dai grandi classici alle opere più recenti. Italiani, orientali, occidentali.Parte del progetto: https://www.mondoserie.it/Iscriviti al podcast sulla tua piattaforma preferita: https://www.spreaker.com/show/mondoserie-podcastCollegati a MONDOSERIE sui social:https://www.facebook.com/mondoseriehttps://www.instagram.com/mondoserie.it/https://twitter.com/mondoserie_ithttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwXpMjWOcPbFwdit0QJNnXQhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/mondoserie/
Paraguay has lost the war by late 1868…but will they admit it? Francisco Solano Lopez drags his nation into the abyss, and the Triple Alliance shows no mercy as they grind Paraguay down. South America's greatest war approaches its apocalyptic finale. Nations can find themselves in victory...or lose themselves in defeat.Sources: https://www.unknownsoldierspodcast.com/post/unknown-soldiers-podcast-episodes-47-51-the-paraguayan-war-series-sourcesMaps: soon, I promiseAudible Recommendation: https://www.audible.com/pd/Embracing-Defeat-Audiobook/B002V5GT5WMusic:"Epic Finale" by Hakaneriksson, via Pond5.com https://www.pond5.com/royalty-free-music/item/59734878-epic-finale"Memories of Argentina" by Mercade, via Pond5.com https://www.pond5.com/royalty-free-music/item/71962407-memories-argentina
Eliza Lynch, Francisco Solano Lopez's mistress and the virtual First Lady of Paraguay is one of the most famous - and infamous - figures in the history of South America. And she played a starring role in the Paraguayan War. Was she a national icon, a greedy prostitute, a wicked queen, a tragic heroine or something else? Will the real Eliza Lynch please stand up?Sources: https://www.unknownsoldierspodcast.com/post/unknown-soldiers-podcast-episodes-47-51-the-paraguayan-war-series-sourcesSocial Media: https://www.facebook.com/unknownsoldierspodcast https://twitter.com/unksoldierspod
In 1865, Francisco Solano Lopez's armies and navies were on the offensive. Three nations joined the war against Paraguay: Brazil, Argentina, and Uruguay, a combination that came to be known as the Triple Alliance. Alliances have their problems, but Paraguay was fighting all alone...and as it turned out, that was worse.Especially when they had to fight naval battles with canoes.Sources: https://www.unknownsoldierspodcast.com/post/unknown-soldiers-podcast-episodes-47-51-the-paraguayan-war-series-sourcesMaps: https://www.unknownsoldierspodcast.com/post/paraguayan-war-part-2-the-triple-alliance-mapsAudible Recommendation: https://www.audible.com/pd/To-Rule-the-Waves-Audiobook/B01MRXZIE1?action_code=ASSGB149080119000H&share_location=pdpMusic: "Down the River" by lynnepublishing, via Pond5.com: https://www.pond5.com/royalty-free-music/item/47771833-down-river-loop-01
Puntata a cura di Untimoteo. La notizia è la produzione, in corso da parte di Netflix Argentina, di una serie TV ispirata al classico fantascientifico El Eternauta. Pubblicata a puntate a partire dal 1959 sulla rivista Hora Cero, la serie a fumetti scritta da Hector German Oesterheld e disegnata da Francisco Solano Lopez rappresenta un esempio straordinario di come si possa fare una narrazione sociale e politica sublimando gli schemi narrativi della science fiction.Un'opera passata alla storia sia per l'eccezionale qualità che per i tristi presagi che si sarebbero avverati a distanza di pochi anni. Dietro la metafora di un'invasione aliena Oesterheld nasconde la propria visione politica sul destino del Sudamerica...“Fumetto” è il formato del podcast di Mondoserie dedicato al mondo dei fumetti. Dai grandi classici alle opere più recenti. Italiani, orientali, occidentali.Parte del progetto: https://www.mondoserie.it/Iscriviti al podcast sulla tua piattaforma preferita: https://www.spreaker.com/show/mondoserie-podcastCollegati a MONDOSERIE sui social:https://www.facebook.com/mondoseriehttps://www.instagram.com/mondoserie.it/https://twitter.com/mondoserie_ithttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwXpMjWOcPbFwdit0QJNnXQhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/mondoserie/
[…] Saisie par la grâce et la lumière, la Salle 101 brise la grève en chroniquant des choses de nature à susciter l’intérêt chez toi, public de feu, juge plutôt : Hector, jolie chose de Léo Henry en écho à L’éternaute, tout aussi jolie chose d’Hector Oesterheld et Francisco Solano Lopez, avec une touche d’Alberto […]
Paraguay’s intervention in a crisis between Uruguay and Brazil in November 1864 began the bloodiest and most destructive conflict in South American history. Thomas Whigham begins his book The Road to Armageddon: Paraguay versus the Triple Alliance, 1866-1870 (University of Calgary Press, 2017), the second volume of his epic two-volume history of the war, with the allied powers of Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay having driven Paraguayan forces out of Argentina and preparing their invasion of Paraguay. While heavily outnumbered by their enemies, Whigham credits the Paraguayan population with a cohesion and endurance that defied Brazilian, Argentinian, and Uruguayan expectations of a swift victory. Despite the formidable defenses constructed by his men, however, the Paraguayan leader, Francisco Solano Lopez, repeatedly ordered attacks in the Alliance forces that debilitated the Paraguayan ranks. By 1868 the Alliance captured the Paraguayan capital Asuncion, yet the conflict dragged on for another year and a half as Lopez fought on in the countryside. It was not until Lopez was killed by Brazilian soldiers in March 1870 that the war ended, leaving as its legacy a continent transformed in ways still being felt today, Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Paraguay’s intervention in a crisis between Uruguay and Brazil in November 1864 began the bloodiest and most destructive conflict in South American history. Thomas Whigham begins his book The Road to Armageddon: Paraguay versus the Triple Alliance, 1866-1870 (University of Calgary Press, 2017), the second volume of his epic two-volume history of the war, with the allied powers of Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay having driven Paraguayan forces out of Argentina and preparing their invasion of Paraguay. While heavily outnumbered by their enemies, Whigham credits the Paraguayan population with a cohesion and endurance that defied Brazilian, Argentinian, and Uruguayan expectations of a swift victory. Despite the formidable defenses constructed by his men, however, the Paraguayan leader, Francisco Solano Lopez, repeatedly ordered attacks in the Alliance forces that debilitated the Paraguayan ranks. By 1868 the Alliance captured the Paraguayan capital Asuncion, yet the conflict dragged on for another year and a half as Lopez fought on in the countryside. It was not until Lopez was killed by Brazilian soldiers in March 1870 that the war ended, leaving as its legacy a continent transformed in ways still being felt today, Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Paraguay’s intervention in a crisis between Uruguay and Brazil in November 1864 began the bloodiest and most destructive conflict in South American history. Thomas Whigham begins his book The Road to Armageddon: Paraguay versus the Triple Alliance, 1866-1870 (University of Calgary Press, 2017), the second volume of his epic two-volume history of the war, with the allied powers of Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay having driven Paraguayan forces out of Argentina and preparing their invasion of Paraguay. While heavily outnumbered by their enemies, Whigham credits the Paraguayan population with a cohesion and endurance that defied Brazilian, Argentinian, and Uruguayan expectations of a swift victory. Despite the formidable defenses constructed by his men, however, the Paraguayan leader, Francisco Solano Lopez, repeatedly ordered attacks in the Alliance forces that debilitated the Paraguayan ranks. By 1868 the Alliance captured the Paraguayan capital Asuncion, yet the conflict dragged on for another year and a half as Lopez fought on in the countryside. It was not until Lopez was killed by Brazilian soldiers in March 1870 that the war ended, leaving as its legacy a continent transformed in ways still being felt today, Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Paraguay’s intervention in a crisis between Uruguay and Brazil in November 1864 began the bloodiest and most destructive conflict in South American history. Thomas Whigham begins his book The Road to Armageddon: Paraguay versus the Triple Alliance, 1866-1870 (University of Calgary Press, 2017), the second volume of his epic two-volume history of the war, with the allied powers of Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay having driven Paraguayan forces out of Argentina and preparing their invasion of Paraguay. While heavily outnumbered by their enemies, Whigham credits the Paraguayan population with a cohesion and endurance that defied Brazilian, Argentinian, and Uruguayan expectations of a swift victory. Despite the formidable defenses constructed by his men, however, the Paraguayan leader, Francisco Solano Lopez, repeatedly ordered attacks in the Alliance forces that debilitated the Paraguayan ranks. By 1868 the Alliance captured the Paraguayan capital Asuncion, yet the conflict dragged on for another year and a half as Lopez fought on in the countryside. It was not until Lopez was killed by Brazilian soldiers in March 1870 that the war ended, leaving as its legacy a continent transformed in ways still being felt today, Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It's been a long winter, but Michael and Kurtis have braved new babies, the snow, and the Don to bring you a brand new episode! You won't want to miss the best comic that they've read this year: The Eternaut, by Héctor Germán Oesterheld and Francisco Solano Lopez!
No segundo ano da Guerra do Paraguai, os EUA se ofereceram para mediar o conflito da região da Prata. Segundo o Departamento de Estado dos EUA, a continuação do conflito prejudicava o comércio e as instituições republicanas na América do Sul. Com essa atitude, os EUA pretendiam estender sua influência até o sul do continente desencorajando o protetorado de nações europeias como França e Grã-Bretanha, o que acreditavam ser uma ameaça ao “independencionismo americano”...
A Guerra do Paraguai: O governo argentino esperava uma guerra rápida contra o Paraguai. Mitre havia prometido perante uma multidão que estaria “em 24 horas ao quartel, em quinze dias em Corrientes, em três meses em Assunção”. A promessa acabou não se cumprindo visto que o Exército argentino carecia de todo tipo de recurso possuindo apenas 2993 soldados na infantaria e 2858 na cavalaria. A artilharia contava com 540 homens e com obsoletos canhões fabricados em fins do século XVIII...
A Guerra do Paraguai foi o maior conflito armado internacional ocorrido na América do Sul no século 19. Rivalidades platinas e a formação de Estados nacionais deflagraram o confronto, que destruiu a economia e a população paraguaia.É também chamada Guerra da Tríplice Aliança. Na Argentina e Uruguai é chamada de Guerra de la Triple Alianza e de Guerra Grande, no Paraguai...