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    <title><![CDATA[Ara Balears in English - supplements]]></title>
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    <description><![CDATA[Ara Balears in English - supplements]]></description>
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    <ttl>10</ttl>
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      <title><![CDATA[In the great Mediterranean]]></title>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>There will be those who, with or without children, will take advantage of the opportunity to go to the movies these days, not only to cool off inside these true climate refuges, but above all to see films like the latest from a studio that has made us dream of many twists and turns. I'm talking about Pixar and its new adventure, entitled <em>Elio </em>and proposes a psycho-emotional defense of the beauty of otherness. It also conveys another equally important message: that, despite everything, we are not alone, and we always have the opportunity to be part of a larger community. In a time when the hate speech of the new, furious far right has returned, it is essential to rebuild bridges of belonging. With the happy publication of <em>Mediterranean Breviary </em>By Predrag Matvejević, in a masterful translation by Pau Sanchis Ferrer, LaBreu Edicions once again gives us a primordial work to understand the profound soul of this ancient and ever-living sea, although in recent years it has also reminded us that it is one of the greatest cemeteries on the planet. The book—with a moving prologue by the eternal Nobel laureate Claudio Magris and an epilogue by David Guzman, who has just been deservedly recognized with the Diffusion Prize—is much more than an essay: it is a lyrical, erudite, and sensorial ode to an aquatic symbolic, historical, and intimate space, a shared territory in which a single uniting substance reigns.</p>]]></description>
      <dc:creator><![CDATA[Jaume C. Pons Alorda]]></dc:creator>
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      <pubDate><![CDATA[Fri, 25 Jul 2025 17:55:25 +0000]]></pubDate>
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