Fondo de Cultura Económica (FCE, Fondo) is the most important publishing house in Mexico[1][2] and one of the most important in Latin America. It was originally established in 1934 by Daniel Cosío Villegas as a way to provide students of economics with books in Spanish on the subject. Little by little, FCE expanded its publishing areas to other subjects that today encompass almost everything, from children's literature to scientific texts. Fondo de Cultura Económica is a decentralized publishing institution funded by the Mexican government.
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For more than 70 years, Fondo de Cultura Económica has been an active participant and protagonist of Mexican and Latin American literary and cultural history through its editors, authors, translations and books. Among those who have actively participated and influenced FCE's trajectory are names such as Alfonso Reyes, Juan Rulfo, Juan José Arreola, Octavio Paz, Carlos Fuentes, Jorge Luis Borges, Carlos Pellicer, Raimundo Lida, José Gorostiza, Alí Chumacero, and Salvador Elizondo, together with many others.
FCE's backlist encompasses more than 7,000 volumes, among which 5,000 (approx.) are still being published or reprinted.[3] This great cultural wealth is grouped in many book collections, among which are:
FCE also publishes the following periodicals: El Trimestre Económico (an economic studies academic periodical), Diánoia (a philosophical studies academic periodical), La Gaceta del Fondo de Cultura Económica (articles about or around its books and authors, edited in México as well as in Colombia), Lecturas, and its Boletín de Novedades (news bulletin).
As an institution, FCE has earned the Prince of Asturias Award in Media and Humanities in 1989, as well as the "Premio FILIJ del Libro" bestowed by the Mexican culture ministry for children's books in 1992. In 1993, FCE received the Premio Laurel de Oro (bestowed by the city of Madrid), a mention in the "Premio Juan García Bacca", awarded by the Association for Peruvian Culture, and the "Calendario Azteca de Oro" ("Golden Aztec Calendar"), granted by the Association of Mexican TV and Radio Journalists).
The following people have been Fondo de Cultura Económica's CEOs: Daniel Cosío Villegas (1934-1947), Arnaldo Orfila Reynal (1948-1965), Salvador Azuela (1966-1970), Antonio Carrillo Flores (1970-1972), Francisco Javier Alejo (1972-1974), Guillermo Ramírez Hernández (1974-1976), José Luis Martínez (1977-1982), Jaime García Terrés (1983-1988), Enrique González Pedrero (1989-1990), Miguel de la Madrid Hurtado (1990-2000), Gonzalo Celorio Blasco (2000-2002), Consuelo Sáizar Guerrero (2002-2008) and Joaquín Díez-Canedo Flores (2008-currently in office).
On September 4, 1992, the then CEO of FCE, Miguel de la Madrid Hurtado, inaugurated its new central office, situated on the Picacho-Ajusco highway in Mexico City. Surrounded by gardens, the central office also has a cultural annex for lectures and events named after Jesús Silva Herzog, a library that keeps and maintains a copy of every book FCE has published for free consultation, and a bookstore named after Alfonso Reyes.
Besides its central office in Mexico, FCE has foreign branches in:
FCE also has representative offices in: Bolivia, Canada, Ecuador, Honduras, Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic, besides having distribution partners in Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Panama and Uruguay.[4]
FCE has its very own chain of bookstores. There are 21 FCE Bookstores in Mexico and 11 in the rest of the Spanish-speaking world, in which FCE sells and distributes books of its own production and those of many other publishing houses.
Every so often, FCE holds the following contests: