Eres Paisita


Book Description

This book is a collection of humorous sayings defining a Paisita. A Paisita is a person of Mexican decent that has not had the advantage of learning social graces. This book jokes about many situations known primarily in the Mexican community that give humor to those whom have traveled the same road as those finding a better way of life.




Midnight in Mexico


Book Description

One of Time Magazine’s Sixteen Best True Crime Books of All Time A crusading Mexican-American journalist searches for justice and hope in an increasingly violent Mexico In the last decade, more than 100,000 people have been killed or disappeared in the Mexican drug war, and drug trafficking there is a multibillion-dollar business. In a country where the powerful are rarely scrutinized, noted Mexican-American journalist Alfredo Corchado refuses to shrink from reporting on government corruption, murders in Juárez, or the ruthless drug cartels of Mexico. One night, Corchado received a tip that he could be the next target of the Zetas, a violent paramilitary group—and that he had twenty-four hours to find out if the threat was true. Midnight in Mexico is the story of one man’s quest to report the truth of his country—as he races to save his own life.




TraceME: A Traceability-Based Method for Conceptual Model Evolution


Book Description

This book presents TraceME, a traceability-based method for conceptual model evolution whose general purpose is to support the evolution of information systems. By providing a set of four TraceME chunks, TraceME is situational-oriented. In this way, it can be adapted to support different evolution projects by just assembling the TraceME chunks. To facilitate its industrial adoption, open source tools were developed and described which support the implementation of the TraceME chunks. The work presented highlights various research endeavors for the development of methods and techniques to automate the evolution of software systems. It explores the requirements engineering field as a steppingstone to a successful software development processes. In 2017, the underlying PhD dissertation won the “CAiSE PhD award”, granted to outstanding PhD theses in the field of Information Systems Engineering.




Tras El Rastro Del Vih


Book Description

El por qué debes leer este pequeño pero interesante libro. En el hallarás respuesta a muchas interrogantes de la vida cotidiana como la hipótesis de donde surge el VIH y sus posibles forma de erradicarlo de la faz de la tierra. También hallarás explicación a algunos fenómenos naturales, que a simple vista y percepción nos parecen malos. Todo ello con lenguaje coloquial a través de los distintos personajes que interactuán en la trama del libro. Creo que la parte más lograda del libro es la frase con que cierra el final, porque se presta para cualquier interpretación ecológica, política, etc, eso lo determinará el tipo de lector.




Las Trovas Chingonas


Book Description

The book is about poetry, which relates to the daily living of the Hispanic people. It is about religion, politics, poverty and love affairs. This book serves as an inspiration and also can be use as an advice for those who are looking for solutions in their daily lives. The center of this book is the Christian ideology and its teachings. The author hopes that this book will help people’s lives and opens the reader’s eyes to the reality that everything can be fixed through love with one another. The thought of this book derives from more than half of a century of meditation and struggles in order to survive.




Touched Bodies


Book Description

Polgovsky Ezcurra examines the politics and ethics of intermedial performance in Latin America during the "long 1980s". Looking at the work of artists from Argentina, Chile, and Mexico, she examines the flourishing of performance art in times of authoritarianism and the ways in which performative gestures animated a range of artistic practices, including collage, poetry, sculpture, mail art, and cybernetic art.




Activism through Poetry


Book Description

Activism through Poetry: Critical Spanish Poems in Translation is a compiled anthology of translated poems, which explore cultural, political, social, and ecological issues in the context of contemporary Spain. The work highlights the active role that poetry plays in the debate of these issues. The anthology begins with an introduction, which provides a theoretical framework and a critical analysis of each poem. It is an important contribution in the academic context and also in the more general context of international social and political action. It constitutes the first bilingual translation of selected poems written by well-known and emergent contemporary critical poets from Spain. The five sections (Historical Memory, Ecology, Political and Social Issues, Patriarchy, and Capitalism) feature four poems with a total of twenty poems (ten written by women and ten written by men). These poets are activists whose poetry comments on society and, more importantly, wants to have an impact on it. The poetic art that is born from ethical commitment has the potential to call attention not only to the realities of the world we live in but also to the possibilities for transformation. Poetry, therefore, is ultimately a political act.




Elements Souls


Book Description

Inside a world collapsed by greed, power and lies over and over again, countries immerse in chaos have taken over the vision of the world. However, this time the secret might come out as a mystery is barely unfolding through the eyes of eight Elemental Seed carriers seeking for answers, friendship, love and revenge. Unfolding their powers, Dolos, Molay, Miranda and Celleste, may think is just a strike of chance, but now they are struggling with their own feelings, school and complicated family relationships. An ancient power that balanced the earth has been awaken again, every time is a different outcome, maybe too much power to control and envy to bear. All the Elemental Souls must gather to revile their true destiny.




Ruben Dario Centennial Studies


Book Description

Rubén Darío (1867–1916), the undisputed standard-bearer of the Modernist movement in Hispanic letters, was born in Nicaragua. In 1886 he went to Chile, where he published Azul (1888), his first important book of poems and stories. Later he lived for extended periods in Argentina, Spain, and France, and in these countries produced his best work: compelling poems of beauty, style, and dignity, especially Cantos de vida y esperanza (1905). The perfection of form, exotic essences, and rich ornamentation of his earlier work give way in his most mature poems to self-probings and doubts, the anguish so characteristic of twentieth-century literature. But the hedonistic note, the quenchless appetite for life, dominating Azul and Prosas profanas (1896) never die out, and are magnificently present in El poema del otoño (1910). Darío has had a tremendous impact on Hispanic literature. He is one of the best examples of the poet who is true to his art as determined by his innermost impulses. His poetry has fertilized a whole generation of writers in Spanish America and in Spain, and even now his influence continues to be felt.




Boletín


Book Description