header | Home | Set as homepage | Add to favorites | | TravelsTalk forums
Search the Site   Advanced Search »
Sections
Newsletter
Subscribe to newsletter:

Poll: Baggage Theft
On how frequent flights you have to claim for theft?
1 of 3 voyages
1 of 10 voyages
1 of 20 flights
Poll results | Old polls


email Email to a friend | print Print version |

Chilean Cultural Background: An Insight

By news desk on June 20,2007

image

Northern Chile was an important center of culture in the medieval and early modern Inca empire, while the central and southern regions were areas of Mapuche cultural activities. Through the colonial period following the conquest, and during the early Republican period, the country's culture was dominated by the Spanish. Other European influences, primarily English and French, began in the 19th century and have continued until today.

The national dance is the cueca. Another form of traditional Chilean song, though not a dance, is the tonada. Arising from music imported by the Spanish colonists, it is distinguished from the cueca by an intermediate melodic section and a more prominent melody. In the mid-1960s native musical forms were revitalized by the Parra family with the Nueva Canción Chilena, which was associated with political activists and reformers, and by the folk singer and researcher on folklore and Chilean ethnography, Margot Loyola.

Chileans call their country país de poetas—land of poets. Gabriela Mistral was the first Chilean to win a Nobel Prize for Literature (1945). Chile's most famous poet, however, is Pablo Neruda, who also won the Nobel Prize (1971) and is world-renowned for his extensive library of works on romance, nature, and politics. His three highly individualistic homes, located in Isla Negra, Santiago and Valparaíso are popular tourist destinations.


104 times read

Did you enjoy this article?

1 2 3 4 5 (total 0 votes)
Most Popular