The cover of the December 2000 / January 2001 double
issue is devoted to the slavery still present in many
parts of the world, accompanied by two interviews by
Gianni Sartori: with Joe Buttigieg on the Sudan and
Chiek Saad-Bouth Kamara on Mauritania.
As you can read on the "to our readers"
page, this issue marks A's 30th birthday! The first
issue went out in February 1971, after a period of preparation
that began after the massacre in Piazza Fontana and
the murder of anarchist railway worker Giuseppe Pinelli.
At this point the article by Luciano Lanza, which discusses
the proposal by the chair of the Massacre Investigation
Commission to wipe the slate clean on the "strategy
of tension" seems to have been chosen on purpose.
On the occasion of the end of the Jubilee, Massimo
Ortalli sums up this event and its consequences, while
the reflections by Carlo Oliva concern the politicians'
jubilee and Felice Accame draws inspiration from the
latest revelations on the death of Descartes to write
on Protestants and Catholics.
Veneto, its masters and its social problems are the
focus of the article by Francesco Codello.
Cubatao, in Brazil, is the most polluted city in the
world; Massimo Annibale Rossi explains why.
Maria Matteo analyzes current opinion regarding the
inevitability of capitalism, present even within the
anti-globalization movements.
In "Free yes, but to pay the SIAE (Italian Authors'
and Publishers' Association)", Giuseppe Vergani
discusses copyright, with its economic, social and cultural
implications, while Rinaldo Boggiani looks back on the
history of the journalists' register, dating back to
the fascist era.
Again on the theme of the mass media and control over
communication, there is also a text by Noam Chomsky,
from an interview with the Z.Media Institute.
"Smoke signals" by Carlo Menga deals with
scrambling and decoders.
There is a triple space for music in this issue: Marco
Pandin reviews Arbe Garbe and Filippo Gambetta; while
Mario Bossi tells us about the Folk Island of Suisio.
De André is the focus of the article by Romano
Giuffrida, entitled "Between Tolstoy, Stirner and
Pasolini".
Francesco Bere gives a detailed illustration of the
history of the failed assassination attempt on Benito
Mussolini by Angelo Sbardelotto.
This time the "Flash" page tells of the murder
of Filippo Pernisa, accompanied by the historical photo
of the funeral.
"Holy Sister Soldier" is the title of the
bitter-ironic considerations on feminism by Francesca
"Dada" Knorr.
On the occasion of the publication, by the Elèuthera
publishing house, of what Kurt Vonnegut states is his
"last" book, we publish two excerpts from:
"God bless You Dr Kevorkian".
The chronicles of "Fatti e Misfatti" begin
with the "discussion notes" presented by Andrea
Perrone and Carmelo Musumeci from Voghera Prison, followed
by a recollection of Luciano Bergonzini by Gianpiero
Landi, as well as "the women's world march"
by Francesca "Dada" Knorr.
Among the letters, we must mention the one by Franco
del Moro telling of his trials and tribulations trying
to order a book by a small publisher on a major Internet
site and the one by Guido Lagomarsino, which could be
defined as the conclusive one concerning the polemics
raised by J.- J. Gandini's review of the book on cannibalism
in China. The anarchists of La Brianza remember Pier
Luigi Magni, while Giuseppe Gozzini, the first Catholic
conscientious objector, explains his opinions on the
abolition of military service.
translated by Leslie Ray
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