Hispanic Art Scene Art Blog
The Latino Authors & Writers Society is recruiting new members!
by hispanic_arts , May 14, 2012—12:00 AM
Latino Authors & Writers Society
The Latino Authors & Writers Society is recruiting new members!
New York City, NY, May 14, 2012 Latino Authors & Writers Society was started to help aspiring and published Latino writers and members of the publishing industry get together for networking, the sharing ideas and information, for readings and support, and just for fun. They also have an annual writer's conference! Anyone and everyone are invited to join, especially those that are interested in contemporary Latino literature! Latino Authors & Writers Society meet the last Friday of every month at the Deja Vu Booklounge located at E.112th Street and Lexington Avenue in Manhattan, starting at 6:30pm.
This year the Society will have its second annual writers' conference on Saturday, October 6th, 2012. The conference will be dedicated to Piri Thomas and Louis Reyes Rivera, two venerable Latino authors that have recently passed away. For more information, please visit our website at: www.latinoauthorsociety.com, or check out our page on Meetup.com!
COMMENTS
( homepage )
07/20/2012 * 07:41:01
Latins = The original tribe of Latium near Rome (modern day Lazio area). Some of their dnacendsets, combined with a partial Trojan ancestry per Virgil's Aeneid, went on to build Rome. Later the term Latin was applied to all the territories of the Roman Empire which spoke a language derived from Latin. In their own languages (Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Romanian, French), they call themselves Latino. The Italians are the closest modern relatives of the original Latins. In the Roman Empire, the others have lineage from Roman colonizers, but in Spain the people are also part Celtiberian, the French are also part Gaul, the Portuguese are part Lusitanii, but they all have a Latin lineage, and their culture is derived in some way from their Roman roots. It shows in the style of thinking, the family structure, the relationship with parents and elders, etc, sometimes in their physical similarity to Italians but not always. So I think of them as second-generation Latins.The next (third) generation of Latinos are the people in countries where the second-generation Latins explored and colonized. So French Quebec is Latin, and the Spanish-speaking areas of Central South America and Caribbean plus the Portuguese-speaking Brazilians are Latins. This is mostly linguistic. Many people there are genetically Latin by ancestry, but many are Native American instead and have their own culture. Some have combined lineages, and some descend from Africa or other immigrants from anywhere in the world. Nevertheless, the most Latin families in Latin America usually have ancestors from Spain and Portugal, and sometimes Italy. It reflects in the type of family and its relationships, its values, culture, etc.Among the Latinos, the Spanish-speaking subset are Hispanic (those who speak the language of Hispania). Again this is mostly a linguistic term rather than an ancestral one. Some may have true Hispanic and Latin heritage and some may not, or some are partial.So an Italian is definitely a Latin (the original). In Italian that would be Latino. In the US most people think of Latinos as people coming from Latin America, where many people are truly Latinos but there are many people with other ancestries that are totally unrelated. But they all officially speak Hispanic (Spanish) which is the legacy of the Spanish Empire, which in turn has the legacy of the Roman Empire, which in turn was initiated by the tribe of Latium.

Mukti Ana ( homepage )
08/13/2012 * 05:42:07
Quite a good entry at all! I just pleased to read about this entry. Really i was looking forward to read about it. love this entry. Thanks for this allocation. :lol: