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Puerto Rican residents are U.S. citizens who can’t vote for president. Their island is neither a state nor a nation. Its history is full of ambiguities.
The Caribbean island’s cuisine combines African, Indigenous and Spanish influences to create dishes of distinction.
In a crossover between academia and pop culture, the Puerto Rican megastar has blessed the book "Puerto Rico: A National History" by Jorell Meléndez-Badillo — essential reading in Philly and beyond.
For me, having written a history of Puerto Rico from pre-Columbian times to Bad Bunny in 200 pages or less, [it] prepared me to write 17 visualizers of short narratives.
Bad Bunny begins his highly-anticipated concert residency in Puerto Rico this summer, and fans are already planning their ...
Mangroves remind me of social justice movements in Puerto Rico, serving as a symbol of our histories and our interconnection. The history of Puerto Rico—and the Caribbean overall—is marked by the ...
In fact, the Grammy winner's latest album, "Debí Tirar Más Fotos," ("I Should Have Taken more Photos"), consisting of 17 tracks, is his love letter to Puerto Rico.
Puerto Rican residents are U.S. citizens who can’t vote for president. Their island is neither a state nor a nation. Its history is full of ambiguities.