Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Enric González

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Years active
  
1976–present

Children
  
Clara Gonzalez

Enric González Barcelona es la ciudad postiza ms famosa del mundoquot Traveler

Occupation
  
Columnist in El Mundo (Spain)

Parents
  
Francisco González Ledesma

Similar
  
Francisco González Ledesma, Francesc Baiges, Jaume Reixac

Mesa redonda ngela rodicio ram n lobo y enric gonz lez


Enric González (Barcelona, 1959) is a Spanish journalist and writer. After several years working as a correspondent for El País, he left the newspaper in October 2012 only to announce his arrival at El Mundo three months later, where he now publishes a weekly column. He also collaborates with Jot Down Cultural Magazine.

Contents

Enric González Enric Gonzlez Ana PortnoyAna Portnoy

El humor ante el peligro di logo enric gonz lez y jon sistiaga


Career

Enric González Enric Gonzlez gana el primer Premio de Periodismo de Opinin quotRal

Son of the writer and journalist Francisco González Ledesma, Enric González denied he wanted to follow his paths until age seventeen, when he began to write in the Hoja del Lunes de Barcelona, a simple publication usual at that time, as newspapers were not published in Spain on Mondays until the late 1980s.

Enric González Enric Gonzlez El corresponsal Duendemadcom

He then went through El Correo Catalán and El Periódico de Catalunya, before landing in El País in the mid-1980s. He specialised in correspondent and special envoy tasks, covering the Gulf war in the early 1990s, from where he suptilely criticised embedded journalism, as well as Rwandan genocide and nuclear tests in Moruroa.

Enric González estaticoselmundoeselmundoimagenes20130116c

His best known work came from his posts as correspondent in diverse cities, such as London, Paris, New York City, Washington, Rome and Jerusalem, from where he did not only cover local and national news, but successfully achieved to describe their societies through different weekly columns. London, New York, where he was based at when 9/11 terrorist attack took place although he had gone to Washington that very same day, and Rome, where he covered Pope John Paul II death, profoundly marked him, pushing him to publish three books on his experiences in these cities.

Enric González Enric Gonzlez Nuevos Cronistas de Indias 2

He also proved to be a great football fan, declaring to be an Espanyol, Inter Milan, AJ Auxerre and FC Nantes supporter, which led him to publish a weekly column from Italy, willing to describe Italian society through Calcio. His columns on that topic were reunited in Historias del Calcio, one of his published books.

Enric González Enric Gonzlez Cebrin tiene el nivel tico de una oruga Negratinta

His relationship with El País progressively deteriorated in the second part of the 2000s, and especially after one of his columns was censored due to his critics on the newspaper management, until he announced his departure in October 2012 as a protest against the job cuts PRISA was putting in place in El País. After three months focusing on his task of collaborator for online cultural magazine Jot Down, El País's rival El Mundo announced the inclusion of Enric González in his staff for a weekly column.

Books

Enric González has written seven books, six of them related to his experience reporting abroad and one on the history of Espanyol football club:

  • Historias de Londres (1999)
  • Historias de Nueva York (2006)
  • Historias del Calcio (2007)
  • Historias de Roma (2010)
  • Todas las historias (2011), the publishing house RBA gathers in one book González stories about London, New York and Rome
  • Una cuestión de fe (2012), on RCD Espanyol
  • Memorias líquidas (2013)
  • Awards

  • In 2006, González won the XXII Premio Periodístico Cirilo Rodríguez, a journalistc award which recognizes the efforts of Spanish correspondents, for the best Spanish war correspondent.
  • Premio Ciudad de Barcelona de Periodismo (2009).
  • References

    Enric González Wikipedia