Pasolini, Pier Paolo (1922–1975)

Author(s):  
Daniel Humphrey

Known in North America mainly as a provocative filmmaker, Pier Paolo Pasolini (March 6, 1922–November 2, 1975) is also celebrated in his native Italy as a significant poet, novelist, essayist, and public intellectual. Pasolini left a rich body of work that has grown in stature since his ignoble death at the hands of a hustler in 1975. Born in Bologna to lower-middle-class parents—a career military officer and an elementary school teacher—Pasolini’s biography is replete with scandal (charges of "obscene acts," all-but-open homosexuality) and accomplishment (innumerable awards, including one from the Vatican itself). Noted early in his career for his poetry in dialect rather than standard Italian, Pasolini’s writing, or, really, his "discursive production," is often more important for how things are said than for what is said. Particularly valuable is his theory of a "cinema of poetry," developed both on paper and celluloid: cinema that stresses the "felt presence" of the director (for instance with hand-held camera work or clearly personal choices in framing).

Author(s):  
Andreia Hall ◽  
Helena Alvelos ◽  
Ana Raquel Xambre ◽  
Filipe Hall ◽  
Ana Teresa Costa ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 26-30
Author(s):  
E. Korochkina

The article reveals the practical experience of an elementary school teacher in shaping knowledge of different types of speech (types of text) among third-graders: text-description; narration text; text-reasoning. An example of organizing a Russian language lesson to familiarize with the text-reasoning is given. The role of such teaching methods as observing the characteristics of texts of different types, conducting an educational dialogue, and independent work on creating texts of different types is emphasized.


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