1,967,931 research outputs found
Carla Benedetti
Libro intervista. Libro intervista. Carla Benedetti, intervistata da Mario Maccherini, parla della letteratura italiana contemporanea e della critica letteraria, affrontando questioni cruciali come il concetto di “finzione”, la tendenza al manierismo o alla “clonazione” delle idee, l'ambigua nozione di identità, le ragioni per cui nella tarda modernità sono state elaborate tante idee di morte e di fine, dalla fine del nuovo alla morte dell'autore..
Discipline and Flourish. An Interview with Carla Sassi
Intervista a Carla Sassi sulla didattica nelle università italiane e sull'insegnamento della letteratura scozzese all'Università di Veron
Carla: Music in Trinidad
Carla speaks about the different kinds of music to be found in Trinidad.Ensino Médio::Língua Estrangeir
Intervista a Carla Rebora
Carla Rebora (1973) è compositrice italiana volta ad un approccio multidisciplinare tra le arti (musica, poesia, teatro etc.) così come si evince dalle sue opere e progetti compositivi che spaziano dalla musica strumentale a quella sinfonica, alla musica per teatro, alla creazione collettiva, in particolare con la compositrice Carla Magnan e con altri artisti quali Sonia Bergamasco
Past, Present and Future: “Postmemory” after the writings of Carla Lonzi
Il contributo affronta il tema della memoria attraverso gli scritti di Lonzi dopo il 1970. Carla Lonzi era nata nel 1931. Dopo essersi laureata in Storia dell’arte, intraprende l’attività di critica e storica dell’arte. Scrive su molte riviste e nel 1969 pubblica il libro Autoritratto. Ma nel 1970, Lonzi abbandonò la storia dell'arte per iniziare una nuova fase della sua vita da una prospettiva femminista e politica. Il femminismo fu una prospettiva di ricerca e non un contesto definito. Fondò “Rivolta femminile” insieme a Carla Accardi e Elvira Banotti e scelse la scrittura e il dialogo come mezzi di ricerca e crescita. Nella “sala d'attesa” dei suoi Diari (come Lonzi stessa li chiamava), scritti tra il 1972 e il 1977 e pubblicati nel 1978 nelle edizioni di Rivolta femminile, Lonzi ha raccontato una lunga storia di assenze, condizioni traumatiche della quale era necessario capire la costruzione. Gli scritti frammentati del “diario”, la ricerca dell'intimità, permettono di individuare: come collegare la memoria e l'oblio, il corpo e il trauma, e come tradurre il trauma in consapevolezza e azione, connettendo a distanza esperienze lontane.The contribution addresses the issue of memory through the writings of Lonzi after 1970. In 1970, Lonzi abandoned art history to start a different way of life from a feminist and political perspective. Feminism was a research attitude and not a defined context. She founded “Rivolta femminile” and chose self-consciousness, writing and dialogue as means to research identity, lost memory of oneself and others. In the “waiting room” of her diaries (as she called them) she drafted a long story of absences, traumatic conditions in a canonized history of which it was necessary to understand the construction. The fragmented writings, the “diary”, the search for intimacy allow us to identify: how to connect memory and loss, how to translate trauma into awareness and action, how to connect distant experiences. From Sputiamo su Hegel to Taci, anzi parla it is possible to outline a practice of reactivation of memory through what I tried to call word or «image bridge». The attention for the Lonzi writings by women artists in the last years will be part of this paper: it demonstrates how through Lonzi it is possible to connect different yet similar points of the same history of awareness, resistance and conflict
Contradictions and the Re-Invention of One’s Own Role: The Publishing House Scritti di Rivolta Femminile in the Life/Work of Carla Lonzi
In the essay on collaborations, art historian Carla Subrizi exam- ines activist Carla Lonzi’s creation of a women’s publishing house. Subrizi probes the fraught relationship feminists had with work in the 1970s. She contends that Lonzi struggled with ideas of autonomy and independence—including economic—feminism and self-awareness, rejecting roles historically linked to institutionalized systems of work and power. For Subrizi, motherhood, being a wife, taking care of others, creativity at the service of a universal right to work, independence and recognition remain relevant themes for rethinking intellectual labor for women
Oral History Interview, Carla Trujillo (1504)
In this interview, Carla Trujillo discusses her roots, which include being born in New Mexico and growing up in Northern California. Carla received her M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Educational Psychology from UW-Madison and became an established author. To learn more about this oral history, download & review the index first (or transcript if available). It will help determine which audio file(s) to download & listen to.Carla Trujillo was born to a working class family in New Mexico and grew up in Northern California. Her extended family and roots are New Mexican (Chicana). She received her B.S. degree in Human Development from UC Davis, and her M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Educational Psychology from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Her dissertation focused on assessing differential treatment of underrepresented students in college classrooms. She is the editor of Living Chicana Theory and Chicana Lesbians: The Girls Our Mothers Warned Us About (Third Woman Press), winner of a Lambda Book Award and the Out/Write Vanguard Award. Her first novel, What Night Brings (Curbstone Press 2003), won the Miguel Marmol prize focusing on human rights. What Night Brings also won the Paterson Fiction Prize, the Latino Literary Foundation Latino Book Award, Bronze Medal from Foreword Magazine, Honorable Mention for the Gustavus Meyers Books Award, and was a LAMBDA Book Award finalist. Carla has also written various articles on identity and higher education. Her latest novel, Faith and Fat Chances, was a finalist for the 2012 PEN Bellwether Prize for socially engaged fiction and is forthcoming from Curbstone/Northwestern University Press. Carla works as the Assistant Dean for Graduate Diversity Program at U.C. Berkeley and has focused some of her recent activities on improving the work and classroom climate using Interactive Theater. She has lectured in Ethnic Studies at U.C. Berkeley and Mills College, and in Women’s Studies at S.F. State University. She has also taught fiction for the Sandra Cisneros Macondo Writers Program and the Lambda Literary Foundation’s Emerging Writers Program
Carla: Traditional food in Trinidad
Carla is from Trinidad but she is staying in France at the moment. She tells Charlotte about what they eat in her country.Ensino Médio::Língua Estrangeir
Carla: Traditional food in Trinidad
Carla is from Trinidad but she is staying in France at the moment. She tells Charlotte about what they eat in her country.Ensino Médio::Língua Estrangeir
Writers Talk Featuring Carla Buckley, Sarah Gridley, Paula McLain
Featuring Paula McLain, author of the memoir Like Family: Growing Up in Other People's Houses; poet Sarah Gridley; and Carla Buckley, author of the novel The Things that Keep us Here.The media can be accessed here: http://streaming.osu.edu/knowledgebank/cstw11/New_Voices-Carla_Buckley_Sarah_Gridley_Paula_McLain.mp3Ohio State University. Center for the Study and Teaching of Writin
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