Saturday, August 30, 2008

Gallstones More Painful Than Kidneystones

video projection!


Finally, after a long and intense process, after months of filming and the joys and hardships, we are pleased to announce to the world that the Young Creatives Film

will be presented Saturday, September 27, 2008 at 20:00
to BARYCENTRO - Piazza Venezia 38

will be an opportunity not only to project the long-awaited video, but also to present the group of young people who conceived and carried out guided by our trainers, writers and directors.
will also be an opportunity to make some party snacks and drinks sweeten the evening, along with music and a relaxed and joyful environment.

For further information, write to giovanicreativi@alice.it

See you on Saturday 27th!

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Adidas Megabounce Test

DIFFERENT IN THE U.S.: THE FIFTH CHILD by Doris Lessing


Up to that point you are ready to deal with the risk of an introspective journey to confront his dark side? This is the challenge that seems to Doris Lessing's novel The Fifth Child.
Harriet and David are two young people who wish to create a fruitful tree in a huge country house, away from the busy city of London in the 60s. Snob and proud to still feel connected to the genuine values \u200b\u200bof other times, they pursue their dreams with strong determination, but the hard little sweet little picture. The fifth and last pregnancy is difficult and painful. The newborn does not seem to be even a child, but a bad-tempered elf.
As the negative of a photograph, any hint of the situation diametrically opposed.

The banal normality of life, with no heroes and purity, is imposed through violence. Ben, the fifth son, apparently a metaphor for the negative emotions that you would not want to ever go out by themselves. He obliges parents to think again about their immunity from the corruption of the world and accept its normality, abandoning stereotypes. She is no longer a good mother, but a woman who feeds ambiguous feelings towards the son, who also tries to give up like a cat with a weak cub. David, impatient and aloof, is no longer the strong, protective father.
impossible not to empathize with the players wondering what would be done for them.
This book is really the ability to accept diversity, confrontadosi first of all with the basic requirement: the awareness of what is incomprehensible to us. Only in this way, probably, the acceptance of others could be called authentic.

References

Doris Lessing, The Fifth Child, Feltrinelli, Milano 2004