Monday, June 30, 2008

What Kind Of Weave Was On Myammee

Antonietta Potente talks with Giovanna Melandri

PRESS
Antonietta Potente talks with Giovanna Melandri
Meeting Thursday, July 3 at 17:30
at the Biblioteca Angelica in Rome for the presentation of the book "Someone keeps screaming. For a mystical political"


Someone keeps screaming. For a mystique politics "is the title of the last book of Antonietta Potente, Italian theologian for many years resident in Bolivia and the non-profit organization promoting cultural ANT.ER.LUX, new Italian subject in view of international cooperation. The book will be presented Thursday, July 3 at 17:30 at the Biblioteca Angelica in Rome (St. Augustine's Square, 8). Antonietta Potente will be presented by the Honourable Giovanna Melandri, former Minister for Youth and Sports and Minister-present shadow of Communications of PD. The work of Antonietta Potente is developed from a search around the hermeneutic theology, ethics as art history, as well as a rethinking of religious life in the light of a spirituality rooted in the present that combines mysticism and politics. Its glossy reflection and concrete places it among the most fertile and creative theologians of the Italian and South American. His latest book reads in one breath and is published by Editions La Meridiana, actually actively engaged on issues of educational culture and spirituality. A book "cried softly," with the delicacy and the determination of a woman who does the "mystique politics" as "a key to interpret the post-modernity." "My theology - says the writer - is a joint science and complicit with the storytellers and narrators of stories. All and all we are challenged by this: there are those who are officially theology and those who simply tell you, living, breathing, being "inside". All the subjects of theology must move beyond all pre-established pattern and follow the life not only with the taste of "serving", but also to "touch" this is the mystic gesture of political life. From this dimension can not be ruled out politics as a gesture to serve the everyday life. "

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