[{"@context":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"BlogPosting","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki24\/cartonera-wikipedia\/#BlogPosting","mainEntityOfPage":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki24\/cartonera-wikipedia\/","headline":"Cartonera – Wikipedia","name":"Cartonera – Wikipedia","description":"From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Social, political and artistic movement originating in Argentina around 2003 Browsing through cartonera books created","datePublished":"2022-08-20","dateModified":"2022-08-20","author":{"@type":"Person","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki24\/author\/lordneo\/#Person","name":"lordneo","url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki24\/author\/lordneo\/","image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/c9645c498c9701c88b89b8537773dd7c?s=96&d=mm&r=g","url":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/c9645c498c9701c88b89b8537773dd7c?s=96&d=mm&r=g","height":96,"width":96}},"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Enzyklop\u00e4die","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","width":600,"height":60}},"image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/f\/f8\/Libros_de_Elo%C3%ADsa_Cartonera.jpg\/220px-Libros_de_Elo%C3%ADsa_Cartonera.jpg","url":"https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/f\/f8\/Libros_de_Elo%C3%ADsa_Cartonera.jpg\/220px-Libros_de_Elo%C3%ADsa_Cartonera.jpg","height":"147","width":"220"},"url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki24\/cartonera-wikipedia\/","about":["Wiki"],"wordCount":3205,"articleBody":"From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaSocial, political and artistic movement originating in Argentina around 2003 Browsing through cartonera books created by Elo\u00edsa Cartonera. Cartonera books from Elo\u00edsa Cartonera.Cartonera is a social, political and artistic publishing movement that began in Argentina in 2003 and has since spread to countries throughout Latin America and, more recently, to Europe and Africa. The founders, Washington Cucurto, Javier Barilaro, and Fernanda Laguna started Elo\u00edsa Cartonera in Buenos Aires in response to the 2001 economic crisis during which the Argentine peso plummeted to one third of its value. The tough economic conditions led to an increase in the number of cartoneros, people who make their living collecting and selling salvaged materials to recycling plants.Cartonera books are made from cardboard bought from cartoneros at three to five times the price set by recycling plants. The cardboard is then used to create covers for short books of prose or poetry. Each book cover is hand painted and sold on the streets at the cost of production in order to increase access to literature. This method of publication has provided the opportunity for unknown authors to be published, as well as for renowned authors to reach a more diverse audience. Beyond selling affordable books, the cartoneras promote literacy and the democratization of literature through workshops and book fairs which bring the greater public in contact with literature. The cartonera publishers also involve the community in the process of book creation and distribution through a cooperative learning experience which pushes aside educational and socioeconomic divides among participants. The books are generally published in small editions of 100 or fewer; however, popular texts are kept in print or printed through neighboring cartoneras.[1][2]Although the cartoneras publish books in print form, information about the publishing houses themselves is often available electronically through their webpages, blogs, and wikis, or through online newspaper stories, interviews, and journal articles. While digital mediums are often used to write about cartonera, the books themselves are art-objects steeped in the smells and smudges of tempera paint and rough scissor-cut edges. Some cartonera books are now being preserved, most notably through the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Cartonera Publishers library collection and database, but the majority of the editions continue to circulate (as they are intended to do) and will disintegrate within ten years due to acid in the cardboard. As with other digitized databases and guides, the list below includes some of the presently known cartoneras, a number which is always shifting.Table of ContentsList of Cartoneras by Country[edit]Argentina[edit]Bolivia[edit]Brazil[edit]Chile[edit]Colombia[edit]Dominican Republic[edit]Ecuador[edit]El Salvador[edit]Finland[edit]France[edit]Germany[edit]Guatemala[edit]Mexico[edit]Mozambique[edit]Paraguay[edit]Peru[edit]Puerto Rico[edit]Spain[edit]United States[edit]Uruguay[edit]Venezuela[edit]References[edit]Further reading[edit]List of Cartoneras by Country[edit]Argentina[edit]Barcoborracho EdicionesCartonerita SolaraCieneguita CartoneraElo\u00edsa Cartonera was founded in 2003 by a group of artists and writers. The founding cartonera in the movement, Elo\u00edsa continues to be the leading publisher of cartonera books with a catalog of over 100 editions. From their inception, Elo\u00edsa has been a collective working with cartoneros, artists, and community members to make books and grow vegetables in Buenos Aires. Everyone who works for Elo\u00edsa is paid for their work and contributions in the book making process.[2] In 2012, Elo\u00edsa was awarded the Premio Principal Pr\u00edncipe Claus which recognizes individuals or organizations that have positively influenced society through cultural action.[3]La Sofia Cartonera\u00d1asaindy CartoneraTextos de CartonBolivia[edit]Madragora Cartonera was established by Aruzamen, a professor of Literature and Philosophy at the Universidad Cat\u00f3lica de Cochabamba. Mandr\u00e1gora Cartonera is a non-profit social and cultural project that fights against the dehumanization of neo-liberalism, though not from a Marxist or Socialist perspective. They publish Bolivian and Latin American literature with an emphasis on a principle of making literature available to all people.[4]Yerba Mala Cartonera was founded in 2006 by Dar\u00edo Luna, Crisp\u00edn Portugal and Roberto Caceres. The cartonera is named Yerba Mala, or weeds, to show their persistence in disseminating innovative and overlooked Bolivian literature while attempting to eliminate illiteracy in Bolivia.[4]Nicotina CartoneraBrazil[edit]Dulcineia Catadora was founded in 2007 by sculptor L\u00facia Rosa. From its inception, Dulcin\u00e9ia distinguished itself from other cartoneras by its strong relationship with the Movimento Nacional dos Catadores de Materiais Recicl\u00e1veis, which works closely with the cooperatives formed by catadores to protect their rights and shift the negative associations with their title \u201ccatador\u201d and their job sorting trash. Rosa had established a relationship with Cooperglic\u00e9rio, an organization that oversees forty-five recycling cooperatives, based in the Glic\u00e9rio neighborhood of S\u00e3o Paulo. Dulcin\u00e9ia Catadora currently holds weekly workshops in S\u00e3o Paulo\u2019s trash and recycling centers where catadores help make books as part of the collaboration between Dulcin\u00e9ia Catadora and the Cooperglic\u00e9rio recycling collective. The books are sold in the center of the city by Dulcineia members, and involve \u201cinterventions\u201d, where, for example, the collective dresses in cardboard box outfits covered with cartonera books and recites poetry through megaphones.[4][2]Katarina Katadora is a cartonera publisher founded in Florian\u00f3polis, Santa Catarina, in 2008 by literature student Evandro Rodrigues. Katerina Kartonera collaborates extensively with Yiyi Jambo Cartonera in Paraguay and, for this reason, centers its publishing on hybrid languages and indigenous literature.[4]Estrela Cartonera was founded in April 2013 in Santa Maria, Rio Grande do Sul, by poets Odemir Tex Jr. and Uiliam Ferreira Boff, social scientists Julio Souto and Diego Marafiga, and many other collaborators. The first title published was Para uma nova did\u00e1tica do olhar, a collection of poems by Odemir Tex Jr. The books were created with a collage technique using pieces of cloth, drawings, and photographs cut from magazines. Estrela Cartonera collaborates with other cartoneras from Brazil, Paraguay, and Argentina.Severina Catadora was founded in July 2012 in Garanhuns, Pernambuco, by writers and cartoneras from a cooperative named ASNOV, and other collaborators.Mariposa Cartonera was founded in August 2013 in Recife, Pernambuco, by poet Welington de Melo. They published writers like Ronaldo Correia de Brito, Sidney Rocha and Marcelino Freire.Chile[edit]Animita Cartonera was founded in Santiago, Chile in 2005 by Diego Portales, Ximena Ramos, and Tanya Nunez. The publishing house has an artistic, cultural, and social purpose and is led by a group of young people who believe art creates spaces for dialogue and exchanging experiences. A central part of their work is leading literary workshops for the public to promote reading and increase literacy. Animita currently publishes books as part of a series. The first series involves contemporary and experimental writing, including many mixed-media works. The second series is dedicated to re-circulating unjustly forgotten authors from the past, and the third is a collection of children’s books.[4]Canita CartoneraCartonera HelechoCizarra CartoneraINFR\u2200CCI\u00d3N edicionesKiltra CartoneraNuestra Se\u00f1ora CartoneraColombia[edit]Dominican Republic[edit]Ecuador[edit]El Salvador[edit]Finland[edit]Karu Kartonera was founded in 2012 by Peruvian poet Roxana Cris\u00f3logo and Johanna Suhonen. In 2014, Mexican poet and designer Daniel Malpica become part of the team taking charge of the design and edition of the book Sivuvalo: Is this Finnish Literature?.France[edit]Germany[edit]Guatemala[edit]Mexico[edit]2.0.1.2 EditorialBakcheia CartoneraLa Cabuda CartoneraLa Cartonera was founded in 2008 in Cuernavaca, M\u00e9xico by Ra\u00fal Silva, Valeria L\u00f3pez, Dany Hurpin, Alicia Reardon, Rocato, Nayeli S\u00e1nchez, & Jos\u00e9 Antonio Su\u00e1rez. The logo for La Cartonera displays a man sitting in the street dedicated to reading. He is a symbol of the work of all of the Cartoneros. La Cartonera serves as an institution that brings together writers, artists, authors, and cartoneros. Editor Ra\u00fal Silva explains in La Cartonera\u2019s blog that, \u201cwe live within an enormous machine that never stops. The vertigo of the massive and the successful is an illness that seems to be incurable. It is important to think of and to know that at the margin of these enormous, monstrous publishing houses there exist small gestures that just want to construct castles in the air\u201d.[4][5]La Cartonera CuernavacaCartonera la CeciliaCasamanita CartoneraCohuina CartoneraKodama CartoneraLa Cleta Cartonera (“The Bike”) was founded in Cholula, Puebla by then-students of the Universidad de las Am\u00e9ricas Puebla in 2011. It has since published works by local authors like Gabriel Wolfson and Daniel Carpinteyro, as well as the experimental poetry book 5 Meters of Poems by Peruvian author Carlos Oquendo. As the books published are marked free of copyright, photocopying, distribution and the making of derivative works is explicitly encouraged. A collection of published works in digital form can be found here.Mama Dolores CartoneraPlastica CartoneraLa Ratona CartoneraRegia CartoneraLa Rueda CartoneraSanta Muerte CartoneraLa Verdura CartoneraMozambique[edit]Paraguay[edit]Yiyi Jambo Cartonera (Paraguay) was co-founded in 2007 by poet Douglas Diegues and painter Amarildo Garc\u00eda with the support of Argentine artist Javier Barilaro. Their work focuses on redefining the concept of globalization within literature and art, and publishing marginalized and culturally oppressed writers and artists. They are breaking down language barriers, national borders, and social repression with vanguard, youthful, and iconoclastic images and texts. Yiyi Jambo has published books in Spanish, Guaran\u00ed, Portuguese and the hybrid language portunhol selvagem.[4][2]Felicita CartoneraMamacha CartoneraMburukujarami KartoneraPeru[edit]Sarita Cartonera is a cultural agent in Lima. Sarita was founded in 2004 by Tania Silva, Milagros Saldarriaga, and Jaime Vargas Luna. After purchasing cardboard from cartoneros, a group of young people from poor neighborhoods in Lima hand manufacture, assemble, paint, and design the books. Sarita Cartonera has also developed a literacy program called Libros, Un Modelo Para Armar (LUMPA), where new readers are introduced to literary criticism and directly engage with the production of literature. LUMPA’s pedagogical model is currently used by a literacy program at Harvard University that is implemented in the Boston Public Schools. Sarita’s catalog includes avant-garde Peruvian writers, and their titles are distributed in bookstores, on college campuses, and at international book fairs.[4][2]Eqquss Editorial CartoneraMy Lourdes CartoneraViringo CartoneroPuerto Rico[edit]Spain[edit]United States[edit]Uruguay[edit]Venezuela[edit]References[edit]Further reading[edit] "},{"@context":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"BreadcrumbList","itemListElement":[{"@type":"ListItem","position":1,"item":{"@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki24\/#breadcrumbitem","name":"Enzyklop\u00e4die"}},{"@type":"ListItem","position":2,"item":{"@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki24\/cartonera-wikipedia\/#breadcrumbitem","name":"Cartonera – Wikipedia"}}]}]