Academic literature on the topic 'Limón (Costa Rica ; province)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Limón (Costa Rica ; province)"

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HOVORE, FRANK T., and JOHN A. CHEMSAK. "New species of Hemilissopsis Lane, 1959 (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae, Cerambycinae, Elaphidionini)." Zootaxa 1340, no. 1 (2006): 45. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1340.1.2.

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Pizarro Chacón, Ginneth, and Damaris Cordero Badilla. "Limon Creole Phrases: A Vehicle for Linguistic and Cultural Preservation." LETRAS 2, no. 58 (2017): 91. http://dx.doi.org/10.15359/rl.2-58.5.

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Phrases and idiomatic expressions used in everyday speech in Limon Creole by a group of elderly people have been collected in the province of Limon, Costa Rica, to preserve those phrases as part of their legacy to future generations. Considering the age factor, the information was gathered by applying a questionnaire to 50 native speakers of Limon Creole. Recommendations are provided, based on the results of the study.Se recogen frases y expresiones idiomáticas del criollo limonense del habla cotidiana de un grupo de ancianos en la provincia de Limón, Costa Rica, con el fin de preservarlas como parte del patrimonio lingüístico regional. La información fue recolectada mediante un cuestionario a cincuenta informantes del criollo limonense, considerando el factor etario. Con base en los resultados del estudio se plantean recomendaciones pertinentes.
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Cohen, Henry. "The English Language Folk Tradition of Limón Province, Costa Rica." Caribbean Quarterly 46, no. 1 (2000): 1–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00086495.2000.11672105.

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Ortiz, Orlando O., and Thomas B. Croat. "A new species of Dieffenbachia (Araceae) from Limón Province, Costa Rica." Webbia 72, no. 2 (2017): 149–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00837792.2017.1330008.

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Camacho Navarro, Enrique. "Photographic Postcards of the Province of Limón, Costa Rica. A Transdisciplinary Reading." Caribbean Studies 48, no. 2 (2020): 41–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/crb.2020.0019.

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Camacho Navarro, Enrique. "Photographic Postcards of the Province of Limón, Costa Rica. A Transdisciplinary Reading." Caribbean Studies 48, no. 2 (2020): 41–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/crb.2020.0019.

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HEFFERN, DANIEL, JUAN PABLO BOTERO, and ANTONIO SANTOS-SILVA. "New species, new records, and new synonymy in Hemilophini (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae, Lamiinae)." Zootaxa 4679, no. 3 (2019): 553–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4679.3.9.

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A new species, Hemierana rileyi sp. nov., is described from the USA (Texas). Tyrinthia lycinella Bates, 1881 is synonymized with T. xanthe Bates, 1881. A new country record (Panama), and a new province record in Costa Rica (Limón) is given for Eranina cretaria (Galileo & Martins, 2005), and a new country record (Panama) is given for Eranina costaricensis (Galileo & Martins, 2005).
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Emma Cornwell, Emma Cornwell. "Effects of different agricultural systems on soil quality in northern Limón province, Costa Rica." Revista de Biología Tropical 62, no. 3 (2014): 887. http://dx.doi.org/10.15517/rbt.v62i3.14062.

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MARTIN, JON H. "Aleurodicus talamancensis, a new whitefly species damaging plantation bananas in Costa Rica, with discussion of a montane orchid-feeding population (Sternorrhyncha, Aleyrodidae)." Zootaxa 843, no. 1 (2005): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.843.1.1.

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A new species of Aleurodicus Douglas is described from Costa Rica. It is a serious pest of plantation bananas in low-altitude areas of Limón Province. A single population from an orchid plant in high altitude montane forest differs in several respects, but is thought to be conspecific and is discussed in detail. This new species is discussed in relation to two similar species which together form the distinctive A. niveus Martin species-group.
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Singh, J. P., T. Leslie Youd, and Kyle M. Rollins. "Geotechnical Aspects." Earthquake Spectra 7, no. 2_suppl (1991): 35–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1193/1.1585660.

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The earthquake caused severe damage that extended over a large region, including the provinces of Limon and Cartago in Costa Rica and the province of Bocas del Toro in Panama. Areas most affected in Costa Rica were the alluvial plains along the Caribbean Coast located west, northwest and southeast of Limon. These areas underwent extensive soil liquefaction and soil failures. Soil liquefaction caused severe damage to roads, bridges, railways, ports, water systems and banana plantations. Geotechnical aspects of bridge and roadway damage are covered in Chapter 6—Bridges.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Limón (Costa Rica ; province)"

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Dudreuil, Lucie. "Revendications sociolinguistiques et identitaires de la population caribéenne au Costa Rica." Thesis, Bordeaux 3, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016BOR30012.

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Tout au long du XIXe siècle, le Costa Rica a construit son identité nationale sur l’idée de « pureté et de blancheur de la race costaricienne ». C’est dans ce paradigme identitaire qu’une population afro-caribéenne provenant majoritairement de la Jamaïque est arrivée sur la côte caribéenne pour travailler à la construction du chemin de fer et dans les plantations bananières à partir des années 1870. Cette population « noire », qui ne parlait pas l’espagnol, mais l’anglais et un créole à base d’anglais, constituait « un obstacle » au projet d’identité nationale. L’année 2015 marque un tournant, car le Costa Rica vient de se redéfinir comme une « République […] multiethnique et pluriculturelle » par un amendement constitutionnel de l’article premier. Cette thèse retrace le processus complexe d’intégration de la population afro-caribéenne au Costa Rica de 1870 à 2015 et défend l’idée qu’une reconfiguration du paradigme de l’identité nationale costaricienne s’est amorcée depuis la zone la plus périphérique du Costa Rica (la province de Limon) et en grande partie par le biais des revendications sociolinguistiques et identitaires de la population caribéenne. En effet, la politique linguistique concernant l’espagnol et les langues indigènes centrées sur la relation du citoyen à la langue officielle est contrariée par la pratique fortement ancrée du créole de Limon dans la Caraïbe costaricienne. L’apport théorique des linguistes Robert Le Page et Andrée Tabouret-Keller qui ont mis en évidence comment les choix langagiers constituent des « actes d’identités » par lesquels les locuteurs exposent discursivement leur identité personnelle, leurs affiliations à certains groupes et leurs aspirations à certains rôles sociaux a retenu notre attention pour montrer que l’utilisation du créole de Limon avec ses concepts et ses symboles propres dans le contexte plurilinguistique et diglossique de la Caraïbe costaricienne révèle des positionnements identitaires favorisant une reconfiguration de l’identité nationale. En 2010, l’UNESCO a classé le créole de Limon dans son Atlas des langues du monde en danger. Existe-t-il une campagne de revitalisation au Costa Rica ? Dans une perspective intersémiotique de l’étude des reconfigurations identitaires, la littérature et les arts de la Caraïbe costaricienne ont été envisagés comme des espaces privilégiés de représentation des identités plurielles et plurilingues et d’expression des revendications sociolinguistiques et identitaires de la population caribéenne<br>Throughout the 20th century, Costa Rica built its own national identity on the “purity and whiteness” of the Costa Rican race. This is the identity paradigm in which the Jamaican population found itself upon arriving on the Caribbean coast in 1870 in order to work on the construction of railways and the banana plantations. This black, non-Spanish-speaking community was a barrier to the Costa Rican national identity project. However, the year 2015, marked a turning point. In virtue of an amendment to the first article of the Constitution, Costa Rica redefined itself as a “multiethnic, multicultural Republic”. This thesis retraces the complex process of integration undergone by the Costa Rican Afro-Caribbean community from 1870 to 2015. This study claims that the existence of this recent reconfiguration of the Costa Rican identity paradigm was in part fostered by one of the country’s most peripheral areas: Limon. The works of linguists such as Robert Le Page and André Tabouret-Keller have proven that linguistic choices can be considered as “identity claims or acts” by means of which a given speaker demonstrates his identity, his background and his aspirations. The people from Limon, by means of their sociolinguistic and identity claims, have thus helped start the aforementioned process of reconfiguration. The well-established use of Creole English clashes with the government’s official policy regarding the use of the official language of Spanish and the indigenous languages. Even though Creole English is spoken in Limon, in 2010 UNESCO classified it in its Atlas of the World’s Endangered Languages. Is there thus a campaign of revitalization in Costa Rica concerning Creole English? In an attempt to analyze the changing identity paradigm from an intersemiotic perspective, this study has chosen to focus on Caribbean literature and art as they both represent powerful mediums through which the expression of the Caribbean identity is portrayed and claimed
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Franke, Kevin W. "A Performance-Based Model for the Computation of Kinematic Pile Response Due to Lateral Spreading and Its Application on Select Bridges Damaged During the M7.6 Earthquake in the Limon Province, Costa Rica." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2011. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/2748.

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Lateral spread is a seismic hazard associated with soil liquefaction in which permanent deformations are developed within the soil profile due to cyclic mobility. Lateral spread has historically been one of the largest causes of earthquake-related damage to infrastructure. One of the infrastructure components most at risk from lateral spread is that of deep foundations. Because performance-based engineering is increasingly becoming adopted in earthquake engineering practice, it would be beneficial for engineers and researchers to have a performance-based methodology for computing pile performance during a lateral spread event. This study utilizes the probabilistic performance-based framework developed by the Pacific Earthquake Engineering Research Center to develop a methodology for computing probabilistic estimates of kinematic pile response. The methodology combines procedures familiar to most practicing engineers such as probabilistic seismic hazard analysis, empirical compution of lateral spread displacement, and kinematic pile response using p-y soil spring models (i.e. LPILE). The performance-based kinematic pile response model is applied to a series of lateral spread case histories from the earthquake that struck the Limon province of Costa Rica on April 22, 1991. The M7.6 earthquake killed 53 people, injured another 193 people, and disrupted an estimated 30-percent of the highway pavement and railways in the region due to fissures, scarps, and soil settlements resulting from liquefaction. Significant lateral spread was observed at bridge sites throughout the eastern part of Costa Rica near Limon, and the observed structural damage ranged from moderate to severe. This study identified five such bridges where damage due to lateral spread was observed following the earthquake. A geotechnical investigation is performed at each of these five bridges in an attempt to back-analyze the soil conditions leading to the liquefaction and lateral spread observed during the 1991 earthquake, and each of the five resulting case histories is developed and summarized. The results of this study should make a valuable contribution to the field of earthquake hazard reduction because they will introduce a procedure which will allow engineers and owners to objectively evaluate the performance of their deep foundation systems exposed to kinematic lateral spread loads corresponding to a given level of risk.
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Bell, Robert. "LIMÓN PATWA: A PERCEPTUAL STUDY TO MEASURE LANGUAGE ATTITUDES TOWARD SPEAKERS OF PATWA IN COSTA RICA." UKnowledge, 2019. https://uknowledge.uky.edu/ltt_etds/32.

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The primary purpose for this research is to examine and identify the social functions of Limón Patwa, a closely related language to Jamaican Patwa spoken by the Afro-Caribbean community of Costa Rica. There is a unique relationship regarding the language contact between Spanish and LP, where the maintenance of this English based language can certainly be complicated by a Spanish language dominant environment. Studying the historical migration of this Afro-Caribbean population to Costa Rica in the 1800s sheds light on the systemic oppression and the lack of integration into Costa Rican society that Afro-Costa Ricans faced in the midst of their arrival to Puerto Viejo (“the old port”). I conducted 8 sociolinguistic interviews with Limón Patwa speakers with efforts to better understand the usage of Limón Patwa, along with valuable information about being of African descent and living in Costa Rica. In addition to interviews with Patwa speakers, a matched guise audio survey was elicited to that involved listening to speakers of Patwa vs speakers of Spanish along with one audio recording of a Patwa speaker using Spanish. A Likert scale was used for participants to rate these voices as trustworthy, intelligent, and friendly, for example, in order to analyze how Patwa speakers are perceived by the general population. Furthermore, this research gives insight to where negative ideologies surrounding Limón Patwa and its speakers may stem from and how it influences the usage of LP. This study takes into consideration the issues of political power and the aspects of language identity, calling to attention the importance of efforts to maintain this minority language among an underrepresented community.
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Lambert, Myriam. "L'oeuvre d'art au coeur des lieux de mémoire comme métaphore des identités." Master's thesis, Université Laval, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/27481.

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L'œuvre d'art au cœur des lieux de mémoire explore 3 types de liens entre la mémoire et les lieux par des explorations artistiques. Dans un premier temps, je cherche à constituer un lieu mnémonique par le biais de l'œuvre Noroît dans l'hippocampe. En second temps, je cherche à cristalliser un évènement singulier de l'histoire collective dans un lieu donné et la troisième exploration est de faire l'expérience d'un clivage culturel radical afin d'analyser la liberté que cette confrontation peut offrir. Un regard théorique sur les identités, les lieux, la mémoire, les lieux de mémoire, l'histoire et l'archive est effectué afin de développer en profondeur la question principale qui est : Comment une œuvre d'art peut s'inscrire dans un lieu de mémoire? L'œuvre finale est constituée de tout le corpus d'interventions créées durant mes quatre années au deuxième cycle.
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"The role of social networks on language maintenance and on language shift: Focusing on the Afro-Costa Rican women in two bilingual communities in the Province of Limon, Costa Rica." Tulane University, 2011.

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This study compares traditional methods of sociolinguistic analysis to Milroy's (1987) theory of social network analysis to analyze language maintenance and shift (LMLS) in a group of 127 Afro-Costa Rican women in two bilingual (Spanish-English) communities, Puerto Limon and Siquirres, in the province of Limon, Costa Rica Since the publication of Milroy's work, a more recent trend has been to determine whether relationships among individuals exert normative pressures that affect their choice to maintain or alter the standard linguistic practices of their community. This study situates itself within this trend and so attempts to determine whether social network organization explains LMLS better than traditional methods of sociolinguistic analysis This objective is accomplished by applying each approach to analyze LMLS of the English spoken by the sample of Afro-Costa Rican women and their maintenance of four Creole phonological variables. The traditional sociolinguistic method of analysis is implemented by the examination of data collected through a questionnaire, complemented by interviews. Milroy's theory is implemented by delineating the network structure of the participants through the types of relations that bind them in order to define a measure of multiplexity and thus centrality. Both approaches were also applied to the examination of phonological variables based on the narration of 104 (of the 127) women of a picture story-task The data suggest that traditional sociolinguistic analysis is more reliable in explaining factors associated with LMLS than the social network approach. The latter did not prove useful in explaining patterns of language behavior as norm enforcement mechanisms in the maintenance of the linguistic practices of the members in the network Neither traditional methods of sociolinguistic analysis nor the social network model were associated with the maintenance of the phonological features of the Creole variety<br>acase@tulane.edu
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Coplin, Daniele Elizabeth. "Racist geographies : legacies of socio-political discrimination against Afro-Costa Ricans in Limón." 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/2152/21646.

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This project looks at the history of the Afro-Costa Ricans in Costa Rica and their relationship with the Costa Rican government. The goal is to show that the geography of the country contributed to the marginalization and invisibility of this minority group. This has been done using archival materials from collections based in Costa Rica and secondary texts found in the United States. Upon examination of these materials it was clear that the province of Limón became a space connected with blackness and there were inequalities between citizens of the coastal province and the central valley. This research highlights the Afro- diaspora in Costa Rica, the flawed Costa Rican democracy and the effect of American Imperialism on Latin America.<br>text
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Shane, Caleb Jonathan. "Building Toward a Consistent Program Evaluation: A Qualitative Study of Community Reaction to Development Programs in Limón, Costa Rica." Thesis, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2011-08-9769.

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Environmental education has been a prominent approach to achieve sustainable development and counteract the megatrend of environmental degradation. In Costa Rica, environmental education has been adopted as an essential tool for protecting and improving the natural environment. The people of Costa Rica have emphasized an awareness of environmental issues and an ability to actively engage in environmental education and sustainable development programs. International development organizations have invested in development programs to establish or improve sustainable development. In order to understand whether international development organizations are achieving their stated mission and goals for implementing development programs, donors and funding agencies usually require that the sponsored programs be evaluated. Unfortunately, there is a growing concern that the current practice of development evaluation limits the reporting of impacts to be fundamentally inconsistent which has created incentives for evaluations to include positive bias instead of serving the purpose to improve organizational decision-making. This research study proposed to evaluate the reaction of a community in Limon, Costa Rica to development programs using an operational framework of evaluation and logic models found in the review of literature. The researcher adopted a naturalistic case study approach intended to retain the natural context of the community setting and provide a holistic understanding of community perceptions. Qualitative methods based in rapid rural appraisal were used to collect data from a purposeful sample and a stratified purposeful sample within the population. Data analysis was conducted at both the research site during data collection and after all data was collected. The researcher incorporated the constant comparative method to determine consistencies, anomalies, patterns, and emerging themes during data analysis. Three overarching themes emerged as a result of the study: (a) community development with subcategories describing community improvement, collaboration with the international development organization, integration of individuals and groups within the community, and the sustainability of projects, (b) education with subcategories expanding on ideas and motivation, learning, and inspiration for the children, and (c) culture with subcategories that discussed community culture, the organizational culture of the international development organization, and relationships.
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Books on the topic "Limón (Costa Rica ; province)"

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Sandy. Viajando sobre rieles en Costa Rica: Tren a Limón. Orlando Sandí Peña,], 2011.

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1954-, Donnelly Maureen A., ed. Amphibians and reptiles of La Selva, Costa Rica, and the Caribbean Slope: A comprehensive guide. University of California Press, 2005.

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Duncan Moodie, Quince, and Victorien Lavou Zoungbo, eds. Puerto Limón (Costa Rica). Presses universitaires de Perpignan, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pupvd.10908.

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Puerto Limón, Costa Rica: formas y prácticas de auto/representación: apuestas imaginarias y políticas. Presses Universitaires de Perpignan, 2012.

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Guyer, Craig, and Maureen A. Donnelly. Amphibians and Reptiles of La Selva, Costa Rica, and the Caribbean Slope: A Comprehensive Guide. University of California Press, 2004.

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Guyer, Craig, and Maureen A. Donnelly. Amphibians and Reptiles of La Selva, Costa Rica, and the Caribbean Slope: A Comprehensive Guide. University of California Press, 2004.

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Guyer, Craig, and Maureen A. Donnelly. Amphibians and Reptiles of la Selva, Costa Rica, and the Caribbean Slope: A Comprehensive Guide. University of California Press, 2004.

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Book chapters on the topic "Limón (Costa Rica ; province)"

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Berrangé, Jevan P. "Origin of Gold from the Golfo Dulce Placer Province, Southern Costa Rica." In Energy and Mineral Potential of the Central American-Caribbean Region. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-79476-6_40.

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Muñoz, Arturo Quesada, Germán Leandro, and Luis Diego Morales. "Geophysical Exploration of the Las Pailas Geothermal Field, Rincon de la Vieja, Guanacaste Province, Costa Rica." In Energy and Mineral Potential of the Central American-Caribbean Region. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-79476-6_31.

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Brandes, Christian, David C. Tanner, and Jutta Winsemann. "Kinematic 3-D Retro-Modeling of an Orogenic Bend in the South Limón Fold-and-Thrust Belt, Eastern Costa Rica: Prediction of the Incremental Internal Strain Distribution." In Pageoph Topical Volumes. Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-51529-8_8.

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Harvey-Kattou, Liz. "Reflecting the Nation: Costa Rican Cinema in the Twenty-First Century." In Contested Identities in Costa Rica. Liverpool University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781789620054.003.0004.

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This chapter argues that cinema has been the primary creative vehicle to reflect on national – tico – identity in Costa Rica in the twenty-first century, and it begins with an overview of the industry. Considering the ways in which film is uniquely positioned to challenge social norms through the creation of affective narratives and through the visibility it can offer to otherwise marginalised groups, this chapter analyses four films by key directors. Beginning with an exploration of Esteban Ramírez’s Gestación, it considers youth culture, gender, and class as non-normative spaces in the city of San José. Similarly, Jurgen Ureña’s Abrázame como antes is then discussed from the point of view of its ground-breaking portrayal of trans women in the capital. Two films shot at the geographic margins of the nation are then discussed, with the uncanny coastline the focus of Paz Fábrega’s Agua fría de mar and the marginalized Afro-Costa Rican province of Limón the focus of Patricia Velásquez’s Dos aguas.
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Lavou Zoungbo, Victorien. "Introduction générale." In Puerto Limón (Costa Rica). Presses universitaires de Perpignan, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pupvd.10938.

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Duncan Moodie, Quince. "Prefacio." In Puerto Limón (Costa Rica). Presses universitaires de Perpignan, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pupvd.10943.

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"Los autores - Les auteurs." In Puerto Limón (Costa Rica). Presses universitaires de Perpignan, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pupvd.10953.

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Barton Brown, Delroy. "La transición cultural de Limón." In Puerto Limón (Costa Rica). Presses universitaires de Perpignan, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pupvd.10958.

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Senior Angulo, Diana. "La conformación de Limón al margen del imaginario social e identidad nacional costarricense." In Puerto Limón (Costa Rica). Presses universitaires de Perpignan, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pupvd.10968.

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Allen Duncan, Donald. "Una histórica. La educación afrolimonense frente a la educación pública costarricense." In Puerto Limón (Costa Rica). Presses universitaires de Perpignan, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pupvd.10978.

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