Beyond the bull in Pamplona

Bullfighting , Journalism , Travel Apr 20, 2013 No Comments

When Australians think of Pamplona—and especially of other Australians in Pamplona—they are liable to conjure up mental images of drunken backpackers drenched pink with sangria, running down a street in terror as several tonnes of irate beef comes tearing down the cobblestones towards them.

To some extent, this image is accurate: Pamplona is a town where, for eight days each year, gap-year revelers with little interest in bulls beyond their bucket lists bare their breasts, leap off fountains, stay outside the city at awful-sounding campsites, and in general foul up the ancient gutters with various of their bodily fluids.
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But to assume that this is the only Pamplona, the only way of experiencing the fiesta, would be unwise. When I return to the ancient kingdom of Navarre and its capital this July, attending the fiesta for the second time, it will be to spend time and interact with some of its other, less easily stereotyped faces.

Read the full article in The Weekend Australian.

Matthew Clayfield

Matthew Clayfield is a journalist, critic and screenwriter.

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