“It’s a dream I’ve had since I was a child. Looking at the world map, I was looking for the furthest place there was and it was always Australia”: this is how Giordano Bruno Guerri shares the enthusiasm for his first experience Down Under in our studies.Guerri he was the protagonist of some events as part of the Week of the Italian Language in the World, in which he, among other things, discussed and presented the Wandering Genius Award, which arrived in Australia for the first time and was awarded to the astrophysicist Orsola De Marco.
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The award, explained Guerri, aims to recognize the so-called “brain drain” or the many Italian men and women who, once moved abroad, “give us back in prestige what we have lost in the workforce”.
Giordano Bruno Guerri’s latest book was released a few weeks ago and is entitled “Benito”. Dedicated to the figure of Mussolini, the volume continues the author’s historical research, “because fascism in Italy is a problem that is not yet resolved”.
Not knowing history means not knowing the present, because history serves to understand our life today.
Giordano Bruno Guerri
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