Mostly, I Write
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Storie e pensieri suoi e di altri, raccolti da Antonio Dini http://www.antoniodini.com
Per contatti su Telegram: @antoniodini
Per iscriversi alla newsletter Mostly Weekly: https://antoniodini.com/iscrizione/
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Forwarded from ProgressTelegram📡
🔹#telegram #video #utilità
Telegram per comunicare con studenti e colleghi
Nell'emergenza che stiamo vivendo credo che dobbiamo mettere le nostre competenze a disposizione della comunità. Ognuno di noi sa fare qualcosa che può essere utile, io, nel mio piccolo, so comunicare online.
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Andrea Ciralolo
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Un grande uomo che ha dato un’impronta alla radio in Italia spiega perché di questi tempi si ama la radio, e come va fatta la radio ai tempi del Coronavirus.

Link: https://www.facebook.com/100007537265103/posts/2573690389558845/?d=n
Come si costruiscono i miti del giornalismo negli Usa. Ovvero, il kulto della personalità. Storia della giornalista del New Yorker Reporter Jane Mayer in the making

Money quote: “On the page, Mayer, a staff writer at the New Yorker since 1995, is authoritative and direct, and as a journalist, she is relentless. She’s waited outside the house of a CIA operative as day turned to dusk, hoping to question him about the death of a man he was interrogating. She uncovered a vast government-run domestic surveillance program in 2011, two years before Edward Snowden became a whistle-blower”

https://www.elle.com/culture/a26537529/jane-mayer-new-yorker-interview-kavanaugh
Ho degli amici così. Non dite niente. Ok? E “Delete Never” è il titolo perfetto.

Money quote: “Online, you’ll find people who use hashtags like “#digitalhoarder” and hang out in the 120,000-subscriber Reddit forum called /r/datahoarder, where they trade tips on building home data servers, share collections of rare files from video game manuals to ambient audio records, and discuss the best cloud services for backing up files.”

https://gizmodo.com/delete-never-the-digital-hoarders-who-collect-tumblrs-1832900423
Una buona idea di Adelphi: Un ebook di Mark Twain in omaggio

https://www.adelphi.it/news/115/un-ebook-di-mark-twain-in-omaggio
È online il progetto #Covid19Italia, nato per diffondere informazioni utili e attivarsi a supporto dell’emergenza coronavirus in Italia. Qualcuno di voi forse ricorderà il progetto @terremotocentroItalia, il team di volontari è lo stesso così come lo scopo: raccogliere info utili e sostenere la solidarietà! Qui il sito con le prime segnalazioni e la form Segnala per contribuire: https://covid19italia.help Su Telegram potete seguire il canale @COVID19I. Attiviamoci! 💪
Il tema è profondo e complesso, più di quel che non sembra. Non a caso ne parla Aeon.

In pratica, i metodi di apprendimento e di lavoro, soprattutto in certe attività di analisi come quelle per la scuola, quando applicati a tutta la popolazione lasciano un segno indelebile nel modo in cui un popolo pensa. Questo è uno di quei casi.

Money quote: “White’s essay – ‘My Five-Paragraph-Theme Theme’ – became an instant classic. True to the form, he lays out the whole story in his opening paragraph”

https://aeon.co/essays/writing-essays-by-formula-teaches-students-how-to-not-think
E così anche Jung era fuori di testa di brutto. Peccato.

Money quote: “As Europe tore itself apart, Jung gained first-hand experience of psychotic material in which he found ‘the matrix of a mythopoeic imagination which has vanished from our rational age’. Like Gilgamesh, Odysseus, Heracles, Orpheus and Aeneas before him, Jung travelled deep down into an underworld where he conversed with Salome, an attractive young woman, and with Philemon, an old man with a white beard, the wings of a kingfisher and the horns of a bull. Although Salome and Philemon were products of Jung’s unconscious, they had lives of their own and said things that he had not previously thought. In Philemon, Jung had at long last found the father-figure that both Freud and his own father had failed to be. More than that, Philemon was a guru, and prefigured what Jung himself was later to become: the wise old man of Zürich. As the war burnt out, Jung re-emerged into sanity, and considered that he had found in his madness ‘the primo materia for a lifetime’s work’.”

https://aeon.co/ideas/the-hypersane-are-among-us-if-only-we-are-prepared-to-look
Forwarded from Fumettologica
20 articoloni di Fumettologica da leggere stando a casa, per aiutarvi a passare il tempo 👉 https://bit.ly/2QevMKu.
Uber e Lyft sono una cosa brutta. Ecco perché.

Money quote: “The report in the Daily Bruin revealed anew that Uber, Lyft, Via and the like are massively increasing car trips in many of the most walkable and transit friendly places in U.S.”

https://usa.streetsblog.org/2019/02/04/all-the-bad-things-about-uber-and-lyft-in-one-simple-list/
Portare la lotta al prossimo livello. Acquistare consapevolezza di classe. Preparare la rivoluzione. Costruire una versione migliore di noi stessi.

Oppure consolarsi con una analisi critica ripetitiva che da dieci anni a questa parte indulge nella scoperta degli stessi fenomeni. Over and over.

Money quote: “These days, it’s common to find an image emerging, unbeckoned, from the reservoir of the past. We spend hours wading through streams of photos, many of which document, in unprecedented ways, our daily lives. Facebook was invented in 2004. By 2015, Kate Eichhorn writes in “The End of Forgetting: Growing Up with Social Media,” people were sharing thirty million images an hour on Snapchat, and British parents “posted, on average, nearly two hundred photographs of their child online each year.” For those who have grown up with social media—a group that includes pretty much everyone under twenty-five—childhood, an era that was fruitfully mysterious for the rest of us, is surprisingly accessible. According to Eichhorn, a media historian at the New School, this is certain to have some kind of profound effect on the development of identity. What that effect will be we’re not quite sure”

https://www.newyorker.com/books/under-review/how-social-media-shapes-our-identity