Associazione non-profit Miradois
PER LA PROMOZIONE DELLA CULTURA E LO SPORT TRA I VICOLI DI NAPOLI
16 ottobre 2009
18.30 Presentazione del libro NAPOLI SICCOME IMMOBILE da parte degli stessi autori ALDO MASULLO e CLAUDIO SCAMARDELLA, modera Carlo Nicotera
20.00 Consegna PREMI MIRADOIS (II ed.)
20.30 Presentazione Progetti dell'Associazione
21.00 Esibizione degli artisit: Maria Basile Scarpetta (monologo), Peppino Isaia (concerto al pianoforte), Paolo Moscarelli (voce e chitarra)

II PREMIO MIRADOIS NAPOLI
Vico Miradois 4 - NAPOLI


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L'Associzione
MIRADOIS è un'associazione NO PROFIT che gode delle agevolazioni
fiscali previste dalla normativa vigente; anche i suoi
sostenitori posso beneficiare di detrazioni d'imposta e deduzioni
dal reddito imponibile nelle misure previste dalla legge.
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In Naples, the passage of time seems irrelevant. There are few clocks in
the streets, and they are almost always wrong. It's as if Neapolitans were
totally unconcerned with plans or appointments, and existed instead in an
eternal present where all that matters is the show.
Each Neapolitan and there are more than a million of them
appears completely absorbed in the production of a one-person street theater in which everybody else is either
an extra or a foil.
Neapolitans tend to ignore the history all around them, these scooter-hurtling,
anarchic, operatic Neapolitans. Instead, they carry it inside, in the blood
and in the bone. For however much citizens of the 20th century they may
appear on the surface, they are still recognizably the children of old
Vesuvius, the threatening volcano that looms over their city superstitious, fate-full,
given to lotteries, the cabala, and books of dreams. They're also the
pleasure-loving creatures of a bay that long ago invented the holiday. (The oldest vacation
home dug out from Vesuvius' lava dates from the early second century b.c.)
So they love idleness and fireworks and dressing up for feast-day processions
rooted in pagan times. Even the Italian dialect they speak with bewildering
speed and intensity brims over with living echoes of the past. For it has
the lazy gutturality of Arabic, the language of the traders and Barbary
pirates they once hobnobbed with. And it bristles with a slew of words and
phrases derived from German, French, and Spanish, a relic of the city's
golden age, when foreign kings and emperors competed for the prize that
controlled the central southern Mediterranean, the strategic key to world
power in the Middle Ages. For 700 years Naples was a royal capital, full
of castles and palaces, with a powerful local aristocracy. In the 17th century
it was the largest city in Europe; in the 18th, the undisputed center of
Italy; and even in the 19th,
after Garibaldi's unification, when the last king abdicated it remained the engine room of
Italian culture.
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