After the cover of the previous issue devoted to schools,
Marchs is devoted to the libertarian pedagogy of Marcello Bernardi, with articles
by Francesco Codello and Roberto Denti, along with an interview with Marcello
Bernardi by us from 1979.
The editorial by Maria Matteo critically illustrates the history
of High Speed in Val Susa, which the powers that be want but the people do not.
Carlo Oliva is prompted by his recent trip to India to reflect
on both the image of Italy abroad and the contradictions between technological
progress and poverty in India, and not only there.
The Sem Terra movement in Brazil is illustrated by Massimo Annibale
Rossi.
Massimo Ortalli investigates the imperialism of the United
States and the intellectual subjugation that affects many Europeans.
The historical and current problem of Italy and its institutions
in relation to freedom is the subject of reflections by Rinaldo Boggiani.
We continue the debate on anarchism and democracy that began
in issues 265, 266 and 267; this time it is the turn of Franco Melandri, who focuses
his discourse on the present.
The recent study conference promoted by the Franco Serantini
Library of Pisa on the relations between Carlo Rosselli - and the activists of
"Justice and Liberty" in general - with anarchists in the thirties offers
an opportunity for the publication of a report by Santi Fedele, and an account
by Pietro Masiello.
A recollection of the ballad singer and author Michele L.
Straniero, with the publication of some of his poems, is written by Cesare Bermani.
They indicate anomalous events, they are called Entartete
Kunst and, together with an example - the Institute for Applied Technology with
its "demonstration machines - we have published an interview edited by Maria
Mesch.
The fatti&misfatti column contains a contribution by
Leslie Ray on the Argentinian struggle of the Mocase campesino movement, as well
as an appeal to the anarchist and libertarian movement concerning the G8 in Genoa,
by anarchists from Liguria and Piedmont.
In "libertarian review" Peppe Sini presents the news bulletin La
nonviolenza è in cammino [non-violence is on the move] while Francesco Ranci illustrates
the book A dangerous trade. The daily life of the Greek philosophers by Luciano
Canfora.
In his social notebook, Felice Accame reflects on stereotyped
images and the influence they can have on daily life.
In "smoke signals", Carlo E. Menga starts with a
yarn by presenter Gerry Scotti, to go on, among other things, to mad cows.
The mailbox contains a letter from Piero Tognoli telling of
an episode of ordinary (repressive) administration, while Maurizio Antonioli challenges
some elements of the article on Leda Rafanelli published in the previous issue
of "A; the author of the article, Felice Accame, responds to him.
There is also an open letter addressed to the prison authorities,
from the " conference work group" of Voghera Prison - a conference that
has not taken place.
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