The cover of issue 338 shows the ruins of the Libera
self-governed space in Modena. With an abundance of
photos, in two articles Andrea Papi and Andrea Staid
show that the space lives on.
In 1998 Marina Padovese passed away. She is remembered
affectionately in articles by Gino, Francesca Palazzi
Arduini, brother Stefano Padovese, Aurora Failla, Ileana
Lucidi, Rino De Michele, Stefania Minozzi, Fabio Santin
and Fabrizia Scaramuzza.
Summer in the city. Turin’s anti-immigrant paranoia,
by Maria Matteo. And Milena Magnani on Italians’
view of the Rom and Sinti.
Carlo Oliva considers the “renewal” of the
colour of the school smock, as ministers mess with schools.
Still on education, Francesco Codello reports on the
conference on democratic education in Leipzig.
Cosimo Scarinzi analyses the government’s current
approach to public employees and absenteeism.
As the war between Georgia and Russia comes to a conclusion,
Antonio Cardella reminds us that the seeds of the conflict
lie in the USA-led NATO intervention in Kosovo nine
years ago. Further back in time, Anteo tells the story
of the Commune of Ovada (1970-71), a hippy experiment
in Italy.
In “fatti&misfatti”, Giorgio Sacchetti
reports on a memorial stone laid for Bernardo Melacci,
poet and anarchist.
In this month’s “E compagnia cantante”
Alessio Lega presents Russian bard Vladimir Vysotsky.
There is a poem, “Il Muro”, by Angela Sacco.
Felice Accame, in “à nous la liberté”,
discusses Smate President Renato Giuseppe Schifani,
Nietzsche, F. Alberoni and the shadow of totalitarianism..
Forty years after the international anarchist conference
held in 1968, a new book and a conference of the IFA
in Imola.
In this month’s libertarian review, Alfonso Amendola
reviews an introduction to Jean Vigo by Pino Bertelli,
Nadia Agustoni reviews the photos of Ahman Batebi and
Andrea Staid reviews both “Non vale la pena vivere
per meno di un sogno” by Rino Ermini and “Cuba
memoria sindacale”.
The regular feature “37 years ago” has the
cover of “A” with the title “Valpreda
is innocent”.
Giuliano Bruno committed suicide in Trieste in May,
after being traumatised by an attack by fascist skinheads.
Giuliano’s family had escaped Argentina during
the dictatorship of the 1970s. He is remembered by Alberto
Prunetti and by his grandfather, Argentine writer Osvaldo
Bayer.
There is a beautiful dossier on the town of Carrara,
so rich in anarchist history, with photos by Luca Vitone
and text by Paolo Finzi.
This issue closes as usual with the letters pages: this
month letters by Antonio Senta, Ronal Perono Querio
and Fabio Nicosia, all of which replied to by Massimo
Ortalli.
by Leslie Ray |