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PAMPLONA

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Title: PAMPLONA Author: Laptop User Last modified by: jcarr Created Date: 8/4/2003 7:36:30 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show Company – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PAMPLONA


1
PAMPLONA
Olé, el toro bravo
  • Capital de Navarra

Presentación Jeanine Carr
2
PAMPLONA
  • Capital de la Comunidad autónoma de Navarra.
  • Home of El Encierro / The Running of the Bulls,
    at the feast of San Fermín in July.
  • 1999 was the 100th anniversary of Hemingway, who
    memorialized the town with his book The Sun also
    rises

3
La Catedral de Pamplona

Hola! Sr. Carr y los Estudiantes de Pingry
Hola! Sra. Carr y los Estudiantes de Pingry.
4
La Fiesta de San Fermín - el 7 de julio
5
Chupinazo in Plaza Consistorial
  • At noon on 6 July Pamplonas plazas and
    streets are packed with people awaiting the
    firing of a rocket to signal the opening of the
    celebration. They hold their pañuelos or scarves
    above their heads and chant the Saints name,
    San Fermín! San Fermín! San Fermín!. This image
    depicts part of the crowd in front of the
    Ayuntamiento, town hall. All eyes are intently
    fixed on the balcony from which the rocket will
    be fired.

6
La Sra. Carr frente a la entrada de the Plaza de
Toros
7
Pamplona La Plaza de Toros
8
El Encierro The Running of the Bulls
9
Los Gigantes
  • The morning procession of the Gigantes and their
    court begins promptly each day at 930 a.m. and
    winds its way through the old quarter. These huge
    figures, created by Navarran artist Tadeo Amorena
    in the 1800s, represent the kings and queens of
    Europe, Asia, Africa and America. The Gigantes
    are accompanied by a colorful court comprised of
    seventeen somewhat smaller and more colorful
    characters known as Cabezudos, Kilikis, and
    Zaldikos

10
La Fiesta de San Fermín
  • A young girl attired in the traditional dress of
    her homeland, participates in a dance troupe that
    performs songs and dances dating back centuries.
    This proud culture, its customs and traditions
    are on display in large and small ways throughout
    the days and nights of Fiesta de San Fermín. The
    many cultural events and exhibitions listed in
    the official program of fiesta are far too many
    for any person to attend. Informal impromptu
    displays are encountered in the streets.

11
El Encierro
  • In Cuesta de Santo Domingo, the very beginning
    of the encierro, the bulls are usually tightly
    packed as depicted in this image and they are
    racing at a rate of speed no human can match but
    for a few moments. Experienced runners who know
    Santo Domingo well can be seen here every
    morning, running in the Navarran style, oble y
    bravo, in the aura of danger and on the horns.

el periódico
12
El Encierro
  • Turning out of Plaza Consistorial and onto the
    shortest section of the route, Calle Mercaderes,
    nearly halfway through the course, the bulls
    remain tightly packed, pushing a mass of humanity
    before them. Only this segment of the course and
    the bullring itself are bathed in sunlight at
    this early morning hour. The balance of the
    half-mile route is shaded by tall, balconied
    buildings.

13
Las Sanfermines
14
The Running of the Bulls
15
El fín de la Fiesta
  • At midnight on July 14 fiesta ends. Again the
    streets and plazas are packed. The closing is as
    different from and as dramatic as the opening on
    noon the sixth. All carry candles and sing a
    mournful dirge. A rocket fires and pañuelos are
    untied. The faces in this image capture the
    emotion of the last moments of fiesta.

El pañuelo
16
El matador
El traje de luces
Las banderillas
La muleta
  • In his Traje de Luces, suit of light, Matador
    Julian Lopez, El Juli, executes a left-handed
    pass known as a naturale with the bull fixed in
    the muleta or small red cloth. El Juli has been a
    sensation since he fought and killed a young bull
    on the day he made his first communion. The
    brave, artistic, baby-faced torero sells out
    bullrings on two continents, earning millions of
    dollars each year. A favorite in the Pamplona
    Plaza de Toros, the crowd chants his name,
    Ju-li!, Ju-li! Ju-li!

17
Plaza del Castillo y el Café Iruña
Café Iruña, hangout of Heminghway
18
The Statue of the Running of the Bulls
19
The Sun Also Rises, 1926
  • Quite possibly Hemingway's best novel,
  • The Sun Also Rises captures the romantic
    idleness and angst of the 1920s Lost Generation
    in most candid form. As a group of post-WWI
    expatriates saunter between wine and bullfights
    in Left Bank Paris and Pamplona, their love and
    self-worth rise and fall with luminous drama. The
    narrator Jake Barnes, a thinly veiled version of
    the author, recounts his ebbing relationships
    with ex-boxer Robert Cohen and love interest
    Brett Ashley as they deal with their masculinity,
    morals and unrealized loves. For all the sexist
    talk about Hemingway, he creates a most modern
    woman out of Brett Ashley, who definitely wears
    the pants in her relationships and struggles to
    break free from insulated female roles of the
    past. Inspired by a trip to the Fiesta de San
    Fermin in Pamplona, Spain in 1925, Hemingway
    based his characters on actual friends and when
    it was published in 1926, it immediately
    established him as one of the greatest writers of
    his time

20
Heminghway at the Running of the Bulls
21
Ray Mouton
  • was born in Lafayette, Louisiana, received a law
    degree from LSU and practiced in his home state
    until 1988 before beginning to devote himself to
    writing full time. A novel, After Advent, was
    awarded first prize in manuscript form by The
    Deep South Writers Conference. He has written
    several film scripts and is at work on a novel
    drawn from his experience in the law.     His
    relationship with Pamplona dates to 1970 when he
    camped on the river bank behind the bullring and
    he has attended Sanfermines every year since
    1986. He lived in Sevilla for periods of time and
    spent winters on a bull ranch in the mountains of
    Mexico, places where he pursued his interest in
    the subjects and themes of this book.     He has
    three children and a stepson. Mouton and his wife
    divide their time between Europe, Mexico, and the
    French Quarter of New Orleans.
  • Pamplona's Fiesta has been described as "the
    best week you can live on the planet," and this
    book takes you to the epicenter of the grand
    festival in Spain's Basque country.
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