Event JSON
{
"id": "34fcbe774e893d7b98031545c3d4c2e1752fd1f329b2a2c552e9c2444562b16b",
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"created_at": 1732366202,
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"tags": [
[
"r",
"https://www.clarin.com/opinion/kawabata-chicos-mundial-go_0_1R06LtHOtW.html"
],
[
"subject",
"Kawabata and the Kids of the Go World Cup"
],
[
"published_at",
"1732365507"
],
[
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"https://www.clarin.com/img/2024/11/15/Gd5YHvW-n_1200x630__1.jpg"
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[
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[
"summary",
"The article compares the experiences of three Argentine boys who played in the World Go Championship in China and Japanese writer Yasunari Kawabata, who wrote about the game in the 1930s. Both the boys and Kawabata knew they would lose, but they saw it as an opportunity to learn about another culture. Kawabata's writings about the game reflect on the changing values and culture of Japan during the 1930s, as the country transitioned from a traditional to a more modern society. The article also mentions the history of Go, an ancient game from Asia, and its introduction to Argentina in the 1970s."
]
],
"content": "nostr:nprofile1qy3hwumn8ghj7un9d3shjtt5v4ehgmn9wshxkwrn9ekxz7t9wgejumn9waesqgrxvh0zck393ed386v4ez08n349qxpnq0f02wau8pv5dyfj7hnu2q3x9cg2\nhttps://www.clarin.com/img/2024/11/15/Gd5YHvW-n_1200x630__1.jpg\nThree Argentines competed for the first time in the championship of that ancient game in China. The cultural changes and what they have to do with the Nobel Prize in Literature.\nhttps://www.clarin.com/opinion/kawabata-chicos-mundial-go_0_1R06LtHOtW.html",
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}