Search results for "urban places"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

L’albero Falcone: legalità e bellezza (Palermo, 1992-2020)

2021

Il saggio è incentrato sull’Albero Falcone davanti la casa del magistrato divenuto simbolo della resistenza alla mafia, emblema del riscatto della società civile e di legalità dopo l’attentato (1992). A partire da una fortissima ondata emozionale l’albero ha profondamente contraddistinto il luogo segnandone l’identità. Ne rappresenta il senso più profondo – la legalità – perché le persone lo hanno reso tale e in modo assolutamente spontaneo, condividendo le loro sensazioni. Hanno creato sull’onda di una fortissima e violenta spinta emozionale un luogo di incontro, non solo fisico, ma anche ideale, che continua emotivamente a coinvolgere non solo sul piano personale, ma anche a livello colle…

Falcone treeemotionSettore M-STO/02 - Storia Modernaspaziospaceluoghi urbaniemozioniPalermoAlbero Falconeurban places
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Sublimare le emozioni: il sacro Monte della devozione (Palermo, secc. XVII-XX)

2021

Il caso di studio presentato è incentrato su Monte Pellegrino, luogo sacro dall’antichità, dove furono rinvenute le reliquie attribuite a S. Rosalia, mentre la città era flagellata dalla peste (1624). Il saggio intende evidenziare come emozioni individuali e collettive abbiano inciso sui processi decisionali e contribuito alla riconfigurazione degli spazi di riferimento. The case study presented focuses on Monte Pellegrino, a sacred place since ancient times, where the relics attributed to St. Rosalia were found, while the city was plagued by the plague (1624). The essay intends to highlight how individual and collective emotions have affected decision-making processes and contributed to th…

Monte PellegrinoemotionSettore M-STO/02 - Storia ModernaSanta Rosaliaspaziospaceluoghi urbaniemozioniurban places
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Cultural institutions as agents of urban and community regeneration in the (post-)pandemic city. The case of the «Laboratorio Zen Insieme» in Palermo

2022

Although all cities in the world have been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, its impacts on the territories, yet to be understood, are unevenly distributed, revealing extremely varied imbalances depending on the places. However, it is clear that the virus and its variants have aggravated pre-existing socio-spatial inequalities, creating new ones and bringing attention back to those implications between space, planning, public health and citizenship that are at the origins of contemporary urbanism. In a reference framework in which the crisis is globalized but unequal and in the absence of a welfare system capable of responding to the urgencies of the most marginalized social contexts and g…

Olsen 2018Settore ICAR/21 - UrbanisticaSettore M-GGR/01 - GeografiaSacco and Blessi 2009). In the current (post-) pandemic context and through the lens of a southern European perspective the purpose of this article is to critically reflect about the role of culture as possible vehicle of urban and community regeneration. In particular we will focus on the activities of the no profit organization «Laboratorio Zen Insieme» in ZEN2 one of the last large popular and peripheral neighborhoods built in Palermo at the end of 80s in order to explore and understand how cultural practices work as agent of urban and social transformation capable of addressing emerging issues especially in the pandemic scenario we are experiencing. Thecasestudy has been conducted through analysis of documents participative observations (Honer and Hitzler 2015) and qualitative in-depth interviews with key actors involved in the conception organization and management of the activities carried out by Laboratorio Zen Insieme with representatives of local institutions and non-formal conversations with participants of the workshops heldin the neighborhood. The experience we narrate finds that cultural practices have re-conceptualized their design and functions as strategies of urban and community regeneration and at the same time have contributed to answer to emergent issues in developing proximity and local based strategies facing up to problems inherent civil rights educationalpoverty socio-spatial justice and have changed the image and identity of urban places they inhabit.In this sense the research provides a framework for development of strategies and legitimization for cultural practices and a point of discussionabouttheirrolein urban development.Although all cities in the world have been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic its impacts on the territories yet to be understood are unevenly distributed revealing extremely varied imbalances depending on the places. However it is clear that the virus and its variants have aggravated pre-existing socio-spatial inequalities creating new ones and bringing attention back to those implications between space planning public health and citizenship that are at the origins of contemporary urbanism. In a reference framework in which the crisis is globalized but unequal and in the absence of a welfare system capable of responding to the urgencies of the most marginalized social contexts and groups a response to the new social and individual needs has been offered by cultural institutions that play a role of territorial agency often independently or in the absence of political institutions. Far from the idea of entertainment and divertissement it is in fact increasingly clear how the practices of cultural innovation experimenting with various forms of action and participation can in some cases play a fundamental role in the processes of social cohesion and community building representing an antidote to the worsening of the phenomena of marginalization and socio-spatial inequalities within cities and territories (Colantonio and Dixon 2011
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