Journalist and writer Annalena Benini takes us on a journey through the Lazio region, where she interviews some of the most interesting and appreciated authors of contemporary Italian literature, several of whom have won the prestigious Strega award for literature. They each talk about how the places they have lived in have influenced their identities as writers and as people.
Difficulty:
Intermediate
Italy
The documentary follows journalist Annalena Benini on a journey through Italy discovering writers in the places that shaped them. The first stop is Naples, told through Valeria Parrella: an intense and complex city, where landscape, memory and daily life intertwine with literature and the identity of authors.
Difficulty:
Intermediate
Italy
Valeria Parrella recounts her deep and complex bond with Naples, a city that is all about language, identity, and memory. Through Almarina, a Naples that is 'wonderful and terrible' emerges, but also a place of freedom, growth, and hope.
Difficulty:
Intermediate
Italy
Author Valeria Parrella talks about the connection between her novel Almarina and various locations within Naples: Nisida (a volcanic islet that houses a juvenile detention center) and Bagnoli (a seaside neighborhood of Naples). What emerges is the portrait of an intense and contradictory city, marked by working-class identity, the sea, and the reality of juvenile prison.
Difficulty:
Intermediate
Italy
Valeria Parrella talks about her intense and contradictory bond with Naples and the neighborhood she lives in. The full-time innovative Donna Assunta school overlooks the sea, but faces Nisida, the juvenile detention center. Naples, she says, is not a city you can just live in and ignore, and has become for her an inexhaustible source of literary inspiration.
Difficulty:
Intermediate
Italy
Valeria Parrella talks about her relationship with Naples and her way of writing about it, based on direct observation and listening to people, far from the usual stereotypes. Her writing stems from an "intermediate" point of view, close to everyday reality.
Are you sure you want to delete this comment? You will not be able to recover it.