Fiction and reality blur on a crumbling internet. “S was lost in his fury. He realized that his old friends, with whom he had shared revolutionary ambitions and hopes in these online communities, had passed into exile, outside the realm of Java, Twitter, and Facebook.”
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Political analyst or disruptive propagandist? A disturbing trend in newspaper editorials in Venezuela. “Analysts interpret. They don’t rebuke, punish, exclude, or explain; that is the job of a propagandist.”
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Passivity, gangsterism, and a lack of unity in Venezuelan politics. “When attempting to describe the government’s regime and its characteristics, the search for unity of purpose within the opposition ends up muddled,” writes Israel Centeno.
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Now that Hugo Chávez is gone, who really has the power and exercises control in Venezuela? Israel discusses Chávez’s lasting effects on the country.
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Israel Centeno shares private notes, previously used with readers and students, containing considerations surrounding the art of writing fiction.
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Israel Centeno argues that despite the Internet’s apparent democracy, the world’s agents of power are still in control.
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Israel Centeno writes to Fidel Castro about how he has outlived his counterparts and is seemingly unchanged from when he first took power in Cuba.
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