“Dario Fabbri narrates a geopolitical perspective woven together with disciplines such as anthropology and collective psychology, supported by historical depth, ethnography, and linguistics.”
Almanac of Sciences – National Council of Research
In this part of the world, we delude ourselves that history is over, that knowledge has already been fully codified, and that there is only one legitimate way to interpret the course of events. Nothing is more deceptive: the humanities are and remain schools of thought, destined to be surpassed, reformed, reinvented. If the tools we know really sufficed, we wouldn’t be so astonished by what happens in the world. Human geopolitics arises from this awareness: from the rejection of linear narratives, of crystallized dogmas. It is not the leaders, nor the maître à penser, nor the economic-financial elites that write history, the stories, but the peoples in movement: their fears, desires, ambitions. Through those feelings over the centuries, peoples have created other peoples, the roots of speech, languages, religions, myths, ideas. Until composing our present. Because communities, even when they do not yet know how to tell their stories, are already at work.
Dario Fabbri is a geopolitical analyst, journalist, and director of the monthly Domino. He has published Under the Skin of the World (Feltrinelli 2024), Human Geopolitics – Understanding the World from Ancient Civilizations to Modern Powers (2023), and Historical Atlas – From the Twentieth Century to the Present Day (2024), both for Gribaudo.
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San Martino di Castrozza, Congress Hall, at 6.00 p.m.
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