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CTXT

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
CTXT
Logo of Revista Contexto
FormatOn-line, print
FoundedJanuary 2015[1]
LanguageSpanish, English
HeadquartersMadrid, Spain[2]
Websitehttps://ctxt.es/

CTXT is a left wing independent Spanish online publication founded in January 2015 that offers long-form news analysis and opinion.[1] Its office is in Madrid, Spain.[2] CTXT is an abbreviation of the name Revista Contexto.

Description

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CTXT was founded by fourteen journalists from a variety of newspapers in Europe, including El País, El Mundo, and La Repubblica. It was created to be a platform for journalists to write with full independence, without serving corporate, political or editorial interests.[2] On its website, CTXT states that its primary goals are "to provide political and economic context to the most relevant news, anticipate the most important issues that will define the news agenda, dynamize culture and creation, promote the debate of ideas and communicate and analyze facts with discipline, honesty, humor (whenever possible), and criticism."[3] It claims to offer an alternative to what it views as the inundation of fast, poorly-edited and often vapid news generated by social media and post-truth politics. Its motto, translated from the website, is "proud to arrive late to the latest news."[4]

CTXT covers topics relating primarily to politics and economics, as well as culture and sports, in Spain, Europe and the rest of the world. It has a multimedia section with video interviews, photography and political cartoons. In 2017, CTXT released a video series called "Qué hacer" ("What is to be done") reflecting on the presidency of Donald Trump. The series consists of thirteen interviews with prominent intellectuals in the United States, including Wendy Brown, Silvia Federici and Nancy Fraser.[5]

The CTXT website includes an English-language section called the "English Corner," and frequently posts interviews and articles from English-language sources translated into Spanish.

CTXT's online content is available for free to the public in a weekly format. Subscribers receive a monthly print publication with a changing theme, called the Dobladillo. Past Dobladillo themes have included feminism and the 8M strike in Spain, Spain's gag law (Ley Mordaza), Gay Pride, Carnaval, and post-truth politics. In early 2018, CTXT and the Spanish publisher Lengua de Trapo launched a new independent press, Editorial Colección Contextos.[6][7] CTXT also has a collaborative editorial agreement with the Spanish left-wing online newspaper Público[8][9] and the US-based magazine The Baffler.[10]

CTXT accepts only sponsors and advertisers that do not interfere with the editorial line.[4] 53% of its budget comes from the subscriber base; advertising accounts for only 12.9%.[4]

Staff and contributors

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CTXT's honorary president is the philosopher and linguist Noam Chomsky. The director of CTXT is Miguel Mora, who for 22 years worked as the Lisbon, Rome and Paris correspondent at El País.[2] In 2010 Mora was awarded the prize of the European Parliament for the best reporting on the integration of minorities,[11] and in 2014 he was awarded the April 8 Prize of the Institute of Roma Culture.[12]

The deputy directors of CTXT are Vanesa Jiménez, former director of La Información and former deputy director of El País, and Mónica Andrade, who is also the CEO of Revista Contexto S.L., the publisher of CTXT.

Members of the editorial board come from a variety of backgrounds and include the journalists Soledad Gallego-Díaz,[13] Jesús Ceberio, Concita De Gregorio, Kostas Vaxevanis, Joaquín Estefanía and Giancarlo Santalmassi, the actor Aitana Sánchez-Gijón, the social scientist Ignacio Sánchez-Cuenca, the filmmaker José Luis Cuerda, the art critic Hans Ulrich Obrist, the artists Miguel Barceló and Alberto Reguera and the French sociologist Éric Fassin.

References

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  1. ^ a b Seguín, Bécquer; Faber, Sebastiaan (15 September 2015). "The Spanish Media Are the Worst in Europe. These Upstarts Are Trying to Change That". Archived from the original on 22 September 2018. Retrieved 16 April 2018 – via www.thenation.com. {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  2. ^ a b c d Schoepp, Sebastian (12 May 2018). "Reporter im Wohnzimmer" – via Sueddeutsche.de.
  3. ^ "Redacción - ctxt.es". ctxt.es.
  4. ^ a b c "CTXT obtiene beneficios en su tercer año: "buscamos lectores, no pinchazos"". 11 January 2018.
  5. ^ acción, CTXT. Contexto y. "Especial: Qué hacer - ctxt.es". ctxt.es.
  6. ^ "Jorge Lago: Me gustaría que me conocieran por lo que hago, no por lo que tengo. Noticias de Cultura". 18 February 2018.
  7. ^ Morales, Clara (24 February 2018). "Ignacio Sánchez-Cuenca: "La superioridad moral de la izquierda es una condena"". infoLibre.es.
  8. ^ "'Público' y 'CTXT' sellan una alianza editorial".
  9. ^ Arranz, Rubén (30 May 2016). "Se abren las fusiones de medios digitales: Público y Ctxt se unen".
  10. ^ "CTXT firma un acuerdo editorial con la revista 'The Baffler'".
  11. ^ "Miguel Mora - Diario Vivo". Archived from the original on 2018-04-14. Retrieved 2018-04-11.
  12. ^ "Miguel Mora, premiado por el Instituto de Cultura Gitana". El País. 17 March 2014 – via elpais.com.
  13. ^ Gómez, Rosario G. (4 April 2018). ""Existe una verdad periodística"". El País – via elpais.com.
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