Hay Festival Cartagena de Indias 2024 was held from 25 to 28 January. In this page you can find the events in the general programme as well as Hay Joven activities for university audiences, Hay Comunitario sessions which took place in different areas of Cartagena, Reading Clubs and Talento Editorial.
Events video and audio is available on Hay Festival Anytime.
The novelist, poet and essayist, Mayra Santos Febres (Puerto Rico) is the author of Lecciones de renuncia and La otra Julia. Rinaldo Walcott (Barbados / Canada) is a writer, critic, researcher in the area of Black Diaspora Cultural Studies, gender and sexuality, and author of the book On Property: Policing, Prisons, and the Call for Abolition. Suraj Yengde is a noted Indian academic and intellectual, an associate researcher with the Department of African and African American Studies at the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research. They will talk to Agustín Laó-Montes, exploring the relationships among race, caste and class, from an intersectional perspective.
Simultaneous interpretation from English to Spanish available
The writer Viet Thanh Nguyen was born in Vietnam and was raised in the United States. A professor at the University of Southern California, he has received Guggenheim and MacArthur foundation fellowships. Author of the acclaimed The Sympathizer, winner of the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, he has also written the short story collection The Refugees, the book of non-fiction Nothing Ever Dies, finalist for the National Book Award, and he edited the anthology of refugee writings The Displaced. His recent publication, A Man of Two Faces, is a brilliant memoir that tells the life story of Nguyen as a refugee, and his identity, both Vietnamese and American. In conversation with Óscar Guardiola-Rivera.
Simultaneous interpretation from English to Spanish available
In 2025, the Hay Festival celebrates 20 years of conversations and thought in Colombia. To mark the anniversary, we have run a collaborative project in which Colombian society has helped us to put the twenty key questions for our time. We are asking ourselves more and more whether we are progressing towards equality of gender, race and class; we tackle this matter based on the following questions: How can we fight structural racism? How is it possible to guarantee that artificial intelligence does not increase existing inequalities? What can the city learn from the countryside, and vice versa? With Gioconda Belli (Nicaragua), Bocafloja (Mexico), Ochy Curiel (Dominican Republic) Colm Tóibín (Ireland) and Justin Torres (United States) in conversation with Ayisha Osori.
Simultaneous interpretation from English to Spanish available
Two writers talk about their recent work with Elisa Guerra. In her latest book, El miedo, María Hesse considers her own fears: those that have accompanied her throughout her life and the same ones that she shares with so many other women. Through a highly visual and allegorical language, her pages bring to life anxiety, manipulation, precariousness, change, loneliness, madness, maternity, aging and death. The Cartagena writer, Cindy Herrera, is an audiovisual media producer who, having studied Linguistics and Literature and a Master’s in Creative Writing, is in the final stages of her doctorate in Latin American literature. She is the author of the short story book El manifiesto del espejo and the book of hybrid narratives Des-entierro. This book is a form of resigned fascination with death as an episode, a long moment to be reflected on.
This year we celebrate 20 years in Colombia: two decades of conversations, debates, questions, music, film, photography and books. Through the voices of some of the festival’s most iconic guests, as well as those who make this great festival of ideas possible, we mark the date and wish a long life to the Hay Festival in Colombia through this special documentary.
Duration: 1 hour, 23 minutes
Direction: Gustavo Gordillo
Rafael Yuste is an esteemed Spanish neuroscientist with an international profile, Director of the NeuroTechnology Center at Columbia University, and one of the drivers of the BRAIN initiative, funded by the Barak Obama administration. Since, 2011, this initiative has been investigating each and every one of the neurons in the human brain. Yuste presents his first work of science communication: El cerebro, el teatro del mundo. For Yuste, understanding the mysteries of the brain puts us at the dawn of a new renaissance, a new humanism that will allow us to take a historical step that can help future generations plan a better world. Yuste is also a leader when it comes to the creation of neurorights, which are new rights for the protection of brain activity and brain data. This protection is necessary because of the rapid development of neurotechnology. In conversation with Sylvie Duchamp.
All Sunday 2 February events will be free for people from the department of Bolívar. Complimentary tickets can be requested at the box office of the Hay Festival (Centro de Convenciones) showing your ID, between 27 January and 2 February.
With the support of the Embassy of Spain in Colombia
In 2025, the Hay Festival celebrates 20 years of conversations and thought in Colombia. To mark the anniversary, we have run a collaborative project in which Colombian society has helped us to put the twenty key questions for our time. Festival guests will bring a wide ranging focus to the conversation, including perspectives from both the global south and the north, and based on the following questions: How can economic degrowth be made an attractive alternative? How would the legalisation of drugs affect the world economy? What can the city learn from the countryside, and vice versa? With Anne Applebaum (United States), Nataliya Gumenyuk (Ukraine) and Jorge Ramos (Mexico / United States). They will talk to Clara Elvira Ospina.
Simultaneous interpretation from English to Spanish available
All Sunday 2 February events will be free for people from the department of Bolívar. Complimentary tickets can be requested at the box office of the Hay Festival (Centro de Convenciones) showing your ID, between 27 Janaury and 2 February.
Peter Frankopan (Croatia / United Kingdom) is Professor of Global History at Oxford University, where he directs the Centre for Byzantine Research, and is a Senior Researcher at Worcester College. He is also UNESCO Professor of Silk Roads Studies and a bye-fellow at King's College, Cambridge. Called a “literary star” by The Times and a “rock star don” by the BBC, his work has been acclaimed internationally, particularly his book The Silk Roads. His latest work, The Earth Transformed. An Untold Story, has been praised for its wide-ranging and erudite analysis of how the environment has moulded global history. In conversation with Andrea Bernal.
Simultaneous interpretation from English to Spanish available
All Sunday 2 February events will be free for people from the department of Bolívar. Complimentary tickets can be requested at the box office of the Hay Festival (Centro de Convenciones) showing your ID, between 27 Janaury and 2 February.
With Colombian sign language interpretation
Paula Moreno Zapata, author of Soñar lo imposible and El poder de lo invisible, will engage in a conversation with Gilbert Shang Ndi, a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from the University of Bayreuth and author of several works exploring the African experience and its diaspora. In this conversation, the participants will discuss relevant authors who have not yet been translated and who are significant to the realities of Colombia and the Americas. They will also share their experiences studying African literature, highlighting its icons and the resonances it holds in the American continent.
All Sunday 2 February events will be free for people from the department of Bolívar. Complimentary tickets can be requested at the box office of the Hay Festival (Centro de Convenciones) showing your ID, between 27 Janaury and 2 February.
With Colombian sign language interpretation
Colson Whitehead (United States) is a writer who has been recognised with the prestigious MacArthur and Guggenheim fellowships, and who has taught at various universities. His first novel, The Intuitionist, was a PEN / Hemingway Award winner, and also won the Quality Paperback Book Club's New Voices Award. With John Henry Days he was a Pulitzer Prize finalist and won the Young Lions Fiction Award. His novels The Nickel Boys and The Underground Railway won, among other awards, the Pulitzer Prize. His most recent book is Crook Manifesto. In conversation with Mayra Santos-Febres.
Colson Whitehead will participate in this event digitally.
Simultaneous interpretation from English to Spanish available
All Sunday 2 February events will be free for people from the department of Bolívar. Complimentary tickets can be requested at the box office of the Hay Festival (Centro de Convenciones) showing your ID, between 27 Janaury and 2 February.
Susan Neiman (United States) is an outstanding philosopher and writer known for her contributions in the fields of moral philosophy, the Enlightenment, metaphysics and politics. Educated at Harvard, Neiman has taught at Yale and the University of Tel Aviv, and, since 2000 has directed the Einstein Forum in Potsdam, Germany. Her new book, Left Is Not Woke, is a critical examination of the distinction between the principles of the left and the phenomenon sometimes known as woke, arguing that the true spirit of the left is based on universalism, justice and the possibility of progress, values that she considers have been distorted by some contemporary currents which prioritise tribal identities, tending towards conservatism. In conversation with Laura Quintana.
Simultaneous interpretation from English to Spanish available
All Sunday 2 February events will be free for people from the department of Bolívar. Complimentary tickets can be requested at the box office of the Hay Festival (Centro de Convenciones) showing your ID, between 27 Janaury and 2 February.
The writer and historian Anne Applebaum (United States), winner of a Pulitzer Prize for Non-Fiction for Gulag. A History and author of Twilight of Democracy. The seductive Lure of Authoritarianism, goes into greater depth in this direction with Autocracy Inc. The Dictators Who Want to Run the World, a book that won the German Booksellers’ Peace Prize. As well as offering a study of the methods of modern autocrats, Applebaum uncovers an intricate network that links totalitarian regimes to the financial world, security services that are dedicated to espionage, and talented propagandists. In conversation with José Manuel Acevedo.
Simultaneous interpretation from English to Spanish available
All Sunday 2 February events will be free for people from the department of Bolívar. Complimentary tickets can be requested at the box office of the Hay Festival (Centro de Convenciones) showing your ID, between 27 Janaury and 2 February.
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