Issue 279 kicks off with an article by Maria Matteo
on the World Social Forum in Porto Alegre, Brazil, which
seems to have been hijacked by the reformist
parties and associations, and worse. Remaining in Brazil,
roving reporter Massimo Annibale Rossi wires in a report
from Conceiçãozinha, Santos, on the struggle
of fishermen and ecologists there against pollution
and exploitation. Over the border to Argentina, and
a communiqué from the Grupo Anarquista Libertad
on the subject of self-organisation.
The centre pages of the issue are devoted to a detailed
dossier compiled by Adriano Paolella and Zelinda Carloni
on global warming and social control, as
part of the occasional series on globalisation.
Francesco Codello discusses the reform of the schools
system, and seeks the middle ground between public and
private. This months libertarian review
has a conversation with Cosimo Scarinzi, editor of Collegamenti,
while Giovanna Panigadi talks about the experience of
Mag6 [mutual financial self-management].
In his social notebook, Felice Accame looks back at
Kant, while in his smoke signals, Carlo
E. Menga quotes Gramsci, every state is a dictatorship,
as he applies his pen/keyboard to the subjects of Actimel
yogurt, health warnings on ads and other miscellaneous
matters.
Massimo Ortallis Ritratti in Piedi
looks at the events surrounding the massacre of the
Teatro Diana in Milan on 23 March 1921, with writings
by Giuseppe Mariani, Errico Malatesta, Armando Borghi,
Luigi Di Lembo and Luce Fabbri, from her biography of
her father.
Fatti e misfatti has the moving text read
by Patrizia Pralina Diamante at the funeral
of her partner Horst Fantazzini, who passed away in
December of last year. There is also an article by Franco
Melandri, The Left and the two freedoms.
Monica Giorgi discusses a complex, subtle Diotima
seminar delivered at the University of Verona by Luisa
Muraro on symbolism and silence, the market and me.
Not even Bush and the Taliban put together threaten
our freedom as much as the paucity of our relations
and the stupidity of our politics.
Nadia Agustoni finds herself reading The Diary
of Anne Frank in Afghanistan, prompting associations
and reflections.
The issue closes with a letter from Franco Melandri
on the church and clericalism, a poem dedicated to Pinelli,
by Antonio Abbotto, and a reprinting of 4 Lance Henson
poems, which had been put together erroneously in the
previous issue.
translated by Leslie Ray
|