'Boedo' is a
working class neighbourhood of
Buenos Aires,
Argentina. It and one of its principal streets were named after
Mariano Boedo, a leading figure in the
Argentine independence movement.
It is known as the home of the
San Lorenzo de Almagro football (soccer) team.
Esquina Homero Manzi
The corner of San Juan and Boedo is mentioned in the opening verse of the
tango ''Sur'', one of the best-loved songs about Buenos Aires. The corner is now known as ''Esquina Homero Manzi'' after the
author of the lyrics, and is the venue for several tango festivals.
The Boedo Literary Group
The ''Boedo'' group were a group of
left-leaning Argentine and
Uruguayan writers in the
1920s. Notable members of the Boedo group included
Enrique Amorim,
Leónidas Barletta,
Elías Castelnuovo,
Roberto Mariani,
Nicolás Olivari,
Lorenzo Stanchina and
Álvaro Yunque.
Magazines associated with the Boedo group included ''Dínamo'', ''Extrema Izquierda'' and ''Los Pensadores'', and
Antonio Zamora's publishing house ''Claridad''.
Olivari, who was a founder of the Boedo group, later became a member of the less political
Florida group;
Roberto Arlt was also associated with both groups.
Transportation
Boedo has access to many bus lines to the center and to the nearby ''Primera Junta'' transportation hub. It has also access to the '
E Line' of the ''subte'' (
subway).
The main roads for car traffic are: Boedo to the South, San Juan/Directorio to the east, and Independencia/Alberdi to the West.