the first European festival on creativity

2024 Programme

Event #3

Friday 30 August, 09.00 pm

Matteotti square1 - euro 4.50
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Silvia Avallone

Why are we grateful to literature? 

Literature is the best place for exploring evil because it questions lives and people, not concepts. Even if these lives and people are imaginary, it doesn't mean they aren't real and authentic. When we read a novel, we are called to become others, often the most uncomfortable ones: those who have committed evil (like the protagonists of Crime and Punishment and In Cold Blood), or those who have suffered it (like Verga's defeated characters). However, facing evil openly is also the only way to choose good. One of the most important lessons literature teaches us is realising that each of us contains both possibilities, and that no person is defined solely by their guilt or trauma. We are stories, not definitions. We are made of freedom and change, we are stronger than the evil that traps and destroys us.

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Silvia Avallone

Silvia Avallone was born in Biella in 1984 and lives in Bologna. Her books include the international bestseller "Acciaio" (2010, winner of several awards, including the Premio Campiello, finalist for the Premio Strega, and was adapted into a film), "Marina Bellezza" (2013), "Da dove la vita è perfetta" (2017), "Un’amicizia" (2020), and "Cuore nero" (2024), all published by Rizzoli. Her novels have been translated into over thirty countries worldwide.
ph. credits: Giovanni Previdi


All theevents2024


   

Event #1

Luigina Mortari

On gratitude, or the joy of care

Event #3

Silvia Avallone

Why are we grateful to literature? 

Event #4

Mariangela Gualtieri

And instead, you shine

Event #5

Matteo Nucci

The gratitude of lovers

Event #6

Chandra Costanza Coletti

Cultivating the flow of spontaneous joy

Event #7

Chiara Mercuri

Women’s eros. Marie de France and courtly love 

Event #8

Massimiliano Valerii, Luigi Zoja

Italy: splendour and decline, emotions and numbers

Event #9

Nello Cristianini

Re-reading Alan Turing in the GPT era 

Event #11

Telmo Pievani

An adventure in the great library of evolution

Event #12

Pierre Magistretti

Mind and body: a connection that produces gratitude     

Event #14

Gabriele Del Grande

A century in motion

Event #15

Massimo Recalcati

Jesus, a man of desire

Event #16

Francesca Cappelletti

A forced gratitude. The portraits of Beauties in 17th Century Europe

Event #17

Matteo Nucci

The gratitude of friends                                                                 

Event #18

Alessandro Barbero

The murder of Matteotti, or on ingratitude

Event #20

Elena Granata, Annalisa Metta

A free city: why cities should not be shopping centres

Event #21

Irene Borgna, Nives Meroi

High-Altitude gratitude

Event #22

Colum McCann, Alessandro Zaccuri

The gratitude of listening

Event #23

Maria Giuseppina Muzzarelli

A pearl to say thank you

Event #24

Matteo Lancini

Beyond gratitude: teenagers and adult fragility

Event #25

Piero Maranghi

Grateful and ungrateful: a semi-serious journey through music history

Event #26

Massimo Recalcati

The miracles of desire

Event #27

Camilla Baresani, Chicco Cerea

To be pop with haute cuisine

Event #28

Matteo Nucci

The gratitude of enemies

Event #29

Fabio Genovesi

The eternal grace of giving thanks

Event #32Children / Kids

Beatrice Zerbini

Thank you, houses! Thank you, things!

Event #38Children / Kids

La Tata Robotica

Me… and my intelligent robot

Event #39Children / Kids

Silvia Neri

Calm as a panda, agile as a cat

Event #41Children / Kids

Claudia Palmarucci

The game of darkness                                                                                          

Event #43extraFestival

Minotauro Institute, with Loredana Cirillo and Filippo Rosa

Thank you! What we have never told our children and students

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