Monday, November 7, 2011

Our fellowships

Each summer (from June to September) the Center for Italian Language IL FARO offers the following fellowships:

One (1) fellowship for each European or Non-European Academic Program of Italian
Two (2) fellowships for each Italian Institute of Culture (IIC) worldwide

Each fellowship equals to 50 percent reduction in the cost of a four-week standard intensive course. The Intensive Course is structured in 4 daily lessons for a total of 20 lessons weekly.

Students who are awarded the fellowship pay half the price of a full month course. Students are still responsible for travel and accommodation expenses.

Each department and IIC must have to recommend the deserving student directly to Centro IL FARO via email. The student nominated must then contact Il Faro via e-mail (info@ilfarolingua.it), send an application form and a letter of recommendation.

Centro IL FARO will then confirm to the student the awarded fellowship.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Italian Review with Mina


Let’s practice subjunctive and conditional tenses with this amazing song by the famous Italian singer Mina.Try to fill the blanks on your own and then check if you were right by watching and enjoying the video!

SE TELEFONANDO

Lo stupore della notte
spalancata sul mar
ci sorprese che eravamo
sconosciuti io e te.

Poi nel buio le tue mani
d'improvviso sulle mie,
è cresciuto troppo in fretta
questo nostro amor.

Se telefonando
io (potere)_____________ dirti addio
ti (chiamare)_____________ .
Se io rivedendoti (essere)_____________ certa
che non soffri ti (rivedere) _____________
Se guardandoti negli occhi (sapere)_____________
dirti basta ti (guardare) _____________ .

Ma non so spiegarti che
il nostro amore appena nato
è già finito.

Se telefonando io(potere)_____________
dirti addioti (chiamare)_____________ .
Se io rivedendoti(essere)_____________ certa
che non soffri ti (rivedere) _____________
Se guardandoti negli occhi(sapere)_____________
dirti basta ti (guardare) _____________ .

Ma non so spiegarti che
il nostro amore appena nato
è già finito.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Music is one of the pleasures of life


Science has discovered that music produces dopamine in the brain. Dopamine is the neurotransmitter of the sense of pleasure in those neural areas where pleasure sensations are elaborated. Obviously, only our favorite music can produce this kind of effect.
The discovery has been made by the Valorie Salimpoor team from the McGill University of Montreal and has been published in "Nature Neuroscience". The experts have proved that, while we listen to our favorite music, our heartbeats get modified, so as the breathing frequency and the body temperature. It has also been demonstrated that we just need to know that we are going to listen to our favorite song, to unleash all the pleasure reactions inside our brain.

So, set your favorite CD, play your favorite song, enjoy it!

Monday, February 28, 2011

Cinema: one day in your life


"Un giorno della vita", (lit. One day in your life) is Giuseppe Papasso’s first film, starring Alessandro Haber, Maria Grazia Cucinotta, Ernesto Mahieux and Pascal Zullino and released on Jan 14th.
The plot is set in the Basilicata region, in 1964.

Salvatore, 12 years old, is now in a reformatory because of his intense passion for cinema. This passion had pushed him every day to bike with his friends Alessio and Caterina to the nearest town to watch old films. In doing so, he had to face daily his father’s hostility. His father is a communist countryman who sees his son’s hobby as “smoke in the eyes”. One day, Salvatore reads of an old 16mm projector for sale and he has the idea of building up a small movie theater in his village. There is just a problem: he has no money. Salvatore buys the projector stealing the money the local Communist Party Section had collected to send a delegation to Togliatti’s funeral. The children’s joy for success lasts only briefly: the adults’ own issues and the State political problems eventually clash with their naïve dream, and Salvatore’s theft is eventually discovered.
The film is a fairytale about the fascinating world of cinema seen through a young boy’s point of view: it heals the soul and the world altogether.

Monday, February 21, 2011

La Treccani Sottolio = Treccani In Oil


The Treccani Sottolio is the latest installation by Benedetto Marcucci. It can be currently seen at the Roman MACRO (Museum of Contemporary Art in Rome) and from June, at the Italian Institute of Culture in New York.
54 volumes of the most famous Italian Encyclopedia have been put in oil in cans, sealed with wax and exposed to the public to underline the critical phase of encyclopedic knowledge and, at the same time, to express the need of preserving it. Encyclopedias are a sort of relic in the Wikipedia era, but, as a matter of fact, they should not be forgotten on a library shelf…

Monday, February 14, 2011

Diabolik: the king of terror

One of the easiest and most entertaining ways to learn a foreign language is surely by reading comics. Today we want to suggest our foreign students learning Italian to read Diabolik.

The title character, i.e. Diabolik, has been created by Angela and Luciana Giussani in 1962. Diabolik is a professional thief, who steals money and jewelry, often from wealthy criminals, with the help of his beautiful fiancée Eva Kant.
They need to steal to sustain their luxurious life and to pay for the state-of-the-art technologies they employ in their robberies.
Particularly exceptional are the masks they use to deceive their identity: they are made of a modifiable resin that looks like real human skin once dried. In this way Diabolik and Eva can perfectly reproduce human facial features. In some comic strips we can see how, thanks to these masks, they can deceive even their own relatives.
Their longtime enemy is Inspector Ginko, chief of the Clerville Police Department in the capital city of the fictitious Clerville State.
The Diabolik adventures are still published monthly, after 50 years from their first edition, with many recurrent reprints. The first issues are particularly precious among comics’ collectors. The comics still fascinate modern readers for their classic plotlines, where good and evil are always at war.

Monday, February 7, 2011

It’s Jovanotti’s “ORA”


Jovanotti is back, with his brand new album: Ora.
The album has been previously anticipated by the hit single "Tutto l'amore che ho" (All the love I have).

In Ora the 15 tracks are mostly dance, a return to the origins of Jovanotti’s career. Lorenzo Cherubini, a. k. a. Jovanotti, lost his mother about 2 months ago, and for him the album helped him cope with the event: “This album in some way compensated the sadness of the experience. I was going back and forth between the hospital and the recording studio. While in the hospital I would ‘entertain’ the patients and so I thought: I want to create an album that makes people feel better. I dedicate it to my mom. She was proud of me and she liked funny and joyful songs”.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Mediterranean Diet, Unesco Heritage

The Mediterranean Diet has been nominated to become cultural Unesco Heritage for Humanity , like the Venice Lagoon, the “trulli” (typical houses) of Alberobello, Machu Picchu, Notre Dame and the Statue of Liberty.

The term “Mediterranean diet” has been used first in the 50s by Ancel Keys, a famous American nutritionist and scientist. This diet is based on food high in fibers (cereals, legumes, fruits and vegetables), olive oil, fish, and it is worldwide known as the healthiest and most nutrient diet, proved to fight cells aging and cardiovascular diseases.

The proposal has been presented by the Italian Minister (Secretary) for Agricultural Politics, Paolo De Castro, and by the Spanish Minister for Agriculture, Fishing and Food, Elena Espinosa.
Italy and Spain are involved in the promotion and defense of the Mediterranean Diet on the International scene. Both countries are committed to spread the knowledge about its specific characteristics and undeniable nutritional advantages.

Friday, January 21, 2011

A newly-found Caravaggio


Mission accomplished! After several years studying the DNA of hundreds of bones, a group of anthropologists at the Bologna University has found the bodily remains of the great artist Caravaggio, who died at 38 in Porto Ercole. The investigation required very precise and sophisticated analysis, particularly using the Carbon 14 radiocarbon dating method.

As four centuries ago painters used lead in their colors, lead was found also in the bones of Michelangelo Merisi called the Caravaggio.

This was not an easy achievement. In the San Sebastiano cemetery , a lot has changed since Caravaggio was buried in there. One of the most recent changes occurred in 1929 when many remains were thrown together in a deep common grave, and they were exhumed only in 1956. Caravaggio’s remains were precisely among the bones in the deepest grave, the most difficult to explore.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Pegeen Vail Guggenheim in Venice

More than 40 years ago, Peggy Guggenheim was informed of her daughter's death Pegeen by a telegram while on a trip to Mexico. In her autobiography, Peggy Guggenheim wrote, "(this was in Mexico) I was informed of the terrible news of the death of my daughter, my darling Pegeen that was for me a mother, a friend and a sister.. "
Pegeen Vail Guggenheim was long forgotten. Her little son, Benjamin Hélion with Benjamin Lanot, both authors bring to life the painter in an illustrated biography: PEGEEN VAIL GUGGENHEIM. At the same time an exhibition is devoted to the Guggenheim in Venice to celebrate Pegeen and her painting.

Peggy Guggenheim Collection
Palazzo Venier dei Leoni
Dorsoduro 701I-30123 Venezia
www.guggenheim-venice.it

Monday, January 10, 2011

The important things

Becoming a father is a huge change in a man’s life, as he needs to change the center of gravity in his life, from himself to his children, from learning to teaching. This is real life: unforeseeable, surprising, and extraordinary.
This and much more is at the core of "Le cose fondamentali" (Einaudi), the latest book by Tiziano Scarpa, just being published, a year and a half after the great success of his Stabat Mater winner of the Strega literary Prize.