Argentina 2025
RPCVs of Wisconsin-Madison
RPCVs of Wisconsin-Madison
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  • International Calendar 2025


​Argentina

Argentine Republic
República Argentina

Southern South America

AREA 1.1M mi2; 2.8M km2 [9th largest of 257 countries]

ARABLE 14% 

POP 46.6M(43/mi2; 17/km2) [33rd highest of 237 countries]

GOV’T Presidential republic 

CAPITAL Buenos Aires (15.5M) 

GDP/CAPITA $21,500 

UNEMPLOYMENT 11% 

IN POVERTY 36% 

LIFE EXP 79 years 

MEDIAN AGE 33 yrs 

INFANT MORT 9/1K live births (140th

LITERACY 99% 

LANGUAGES Spanish (official), Italian, English, German, French, indigenous (Quechua, Guarani, Mapudungun)

RELIGIONS Roman Catholic 63%, Evangelical 15%, Jehovah's Witness and Church of Jesus Christ 1%, other (includes Muslim, Jewish) 1%, none/agnostic/atheist/unspecified 19% 

HEALTH 10% of GDP 

EDUCATION 5% of GDP (79th

MILITARY 0.6% of GDP (154th

LABOR FORCE 

Agriculture 11%, industry 28%, services 61%

PCVs 1992–1994   CURRENT: 0; TTD: 38

Argentina

Change has come to the Pampas of Argentina. Some estancias, or ranches, must look for a new business model beyond cattle.

 

Outside of Buenos Aires, one estancia has turned from cattle ranching to horse breeding and tourism. A portion of this vast ranch has been given over to its earliest residents, the rhea and capybara, for wildlife viewing by tourists. Female gauchos, or cowhands, represent another big change. Dressed in a traditional poncho and high leather boots, this gaucho washes down her horse after a strenuous performance for spectators, in which the rider and her horse demonstrated their skills in traditional ranch work.

 

Charles Eilers © 2022

Nigeria & Ethiopia 1966–1969

Teacher Training





​Adult Books

Things We Lost in the Fire: Stories
By Mariana Enríques, trans Megan McDowell.

Publisher: Hogarth; Translation edition (February 21, 2017)

Language: English

Hardcover: 208 pages
ISBN-10:‎ 045149511X
ISBN-13: 978-0451495112


Summary:

Vanity Fair, among others. In 2020 she won an Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. She is from Richmond, Kentucky, and lives in Santiago, Chile.

Praise for THINGS WE LOST IN THE FIRE: 
“Enriquez’s stories are historically aware and class-conscious, but her characters never avail themselves of sentimentalism or comfort. She’s after a truth more profound, and more disturbing, than whatever the strict dictates of realism allow….[P]ropulsive and mesmerizing, laced with vivid descriptions of the grotesque…and the darkest humor.”
) stories explore what happens when our darkest desires are left to roam unchecked and show why Mariana Enriquez has become one of the most celebrated new voices in global literature.

New York Times Book Review

“…in [Enriquez’s] hands, the country’s inequality, beauty, and corruption tangle together to become a manifestation of our own darkest thoughts and fears. The spookiness of these 12 stories sets into the reader’s mind like a jet stone, sparkling through all that darkness.”
Vanity Fair

Things We Lost in the Fire is a searing, striking portrait of the social fabric of Argentina and the collective consciousness of a generation affected by a particular stew of history, religion and imagination. Mariana Enriquez has a truly unique voice and these original, provocative stories will leave a lasting imprint.”The Rumpus

"Mariana Enriquez’s eerie short story collection, Things We Lost in the Fire, looks at contemporary life in Argentina through a strange, surreal, and often disturbing lens. In 12 stories containing black magic, a child serial killer, women setting themselves on fire to protest domestic violence, ghosts, demons, and all kinds of monsters, Enriquez unforgettably brings horror and the macabre to life."Buzzfeed/“31 Incredible New Books You Need to Read This Spring”

A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR: 

Praise for THINGS WE LOST IN THE FIRE:  is a writer and journalist based in Buenos Aires. She is the author of The Dangers of Smoking in Bed, which was a finalist for the International Booker Prize, the Kirkus Prize, the Ray Bradbury Prize for Science Fiction, Fantasy, & Speculative Fiction, and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize in Fiction, and the novel Our Share of Night.

Megan McDowell has translated many of the most important Latin American writers working today. Her translations have won the National Book Award for Translated Literature, the English PEN award, the Premio Valle-Inclán, and two O. Henry Prizes, and have been nominated for the International Booker Prize (four times) and the Kirkus Prize. Her short story translations have been featured in The New YorkerThe Paris ReviewThe New York Times MagazineTin HouseMcSweeney’s, and Granta, among others. In 2020 she won an Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. She is from Richmond, Kentucky, and lives in Santiago, Chile.

​Kids' Books

Furia
By Yamile Saied Méndez.

Publisher: Chapel Hill, NC: Algonquin Books, 2020.

Format: 357 pp.

ISBN: 978-1-61620-991-9

Age Range: 14+ yrs./YA

Summary:

Seventeen-year-old Camila Hassan, a rising soccer star in Rosario, Argentina, dreams of playing professionally, in defiance of her fathers' wishes and at the risk of her budding romance with Diego.

​Films

Film:Tango Feroz: La leyenda de Tanguito (Wild Tango)
Director:
Marcelo Piñeyro
Release Date: 1993

​Music

​Recipes

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