September 2021 La Voce
Welcome to the Dante Alighieri Society of BC’s newsletter & Happy First Day of Fall! 🍂 You autumn know that we have many events and cou
DANTE ALIGHIERI SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON
presents the return of the
FESTA di NATALE POTLUCK
December 8, 2021
6:00-8:30 PM
St Clement’s Church
1501 32nd Ave S., Seattle 98144
WE HAVE HAVE REACHED OUR CAPACITY LIMIT FOR THE FESTA.
WE ARE UNABLE TO ACCEPT ANY MORE RESERVATIONS.
For our December 8 meeting, we plan on holding our traditional potluck Festa di Natale, with good food, wine, sparkling conviviality (all supplied by our members!) and a game of tombola. Giuseppe Tassone will be out tombolameister, as usual. There will of course be prizes! There is no charge for attending this meeting.
Members and guests are encouraged to bring main courses, appetizers and/or desserts to share*, as well as a bottle of wine. Your favorite Holiday recipe is welcome!!
(*see guidelines below)
We’re asking you to please make reservations this year. We haven’t done this before but we need a record of who is coming in order to meet COVID guidelines. If you bring guests, please reserve their spots as well.
*We require all attendees to please follow the Live Meeting Covid Guidelines:
We hope you will feel comfortable enough to come to the party. Our Festa di Natale is always a good way to kick off the Holiday season!
St. Clement’s Episcopal Church, 1501 32nd Ave. S, Seattle 98144, is in the Mt Baker neighborhood, just south of where I-90 meets Rainier Avenue. You may park in the church lot; there is also ample free street parking. Look for Dante signs at the lower entrance to the church, next to the garden.
When: November 10, 2021
Where: St. Clement’s Episcopal Church, 1501 32nd Ave. S, Seattle 98144
Topic: Every Little Thing
Local author, Mary Lou Sanelli will speak about her new book, “Every Little Thing”. Copies of her book will be available for purchase.
Mary Lou Sanelli is a writer, public speaker and dance teacher. She is the author of six poetry collections and two collections of essays. Her staged reading from her collection The Immigrant’s Table is an acclaimed, original spoken duet that dramatically and poetically tells a story of immigration, cultural adjustment and weaving Old and New Worlds together into a rich fabric of memoir.
When: October 27, 2021
Where: St. Clement’s Episcopal Church, 1501 32nd Ave. S, Seattle 98144
Speaker: Albert Sbragia
Topic: Prima dei Romani . . . Gli Etruschi!
Gli etruschi costituirono la prima grande civiltà autoctona della pensiola italiana, con un territorio corrispondente all’incirca alla Toscana, all’Umbria e al Lazio settentrionale con propaggini nell’Italia del Nord e del Sud. Gli etruschi furono una potenza importante nel mare mediterraneo. Ebbero rapporti commerciali e artistici con i greci e con il mediterraneo orientale ed esercitarono una profonda influenza sulla prima civiltà romana. Popolo misterioso anche per i romani a causa della loro lingua non-indoeuropea e dei loro riti religiosi segreti la civiltà etrusca scomparve quasi del tutto dopo la conquista romana nei primi secoli avanti Cristo. Esploreremo questa affascinante civiltà, i suoi contributi alla civiltà’ occidentale e la sua arte.
Before the Romans… the ETRUSCANS
The Etruscans were the first great indigenous civilization of the Italian peninsula, whose territory corresponded more or less to contemporary Tuscany, Umbria and northern Lazio with extensions into northern and southern Italy. The Etruscans were an important power in the Mediterranean. They had commercial and artistic ties with the Greeks and the eastern Mediterranean and they exercised a profound influence on early Roman civilization. A mysterious people even for the Romans because of their non-Indo-European language and their secret religious rites, Etruscan civilization disappeared almost completely after the Roman conquest in the early centuries BC. We will explore this fascinating civilization, its contributions to Western civilization and its art.
Albert Sbragia is an Associate Professor of Italian Studies at the University of Washington, member of the Cinema Studies program in the Department of Comparative Literature, and a faculty member of the European Studies program. His publications include a book, Carlo Emilio Gadda and the Modern Macaronic (University Press of Florida, 1996), and publications on 19th Century and 20th Century Italian literature and culture. His current research project is entitled “Modernity in Rome” and deals with urbanistic, literary, and visual constructions of the Italian capital from 1870 to the present. He also teaches in the Italian Studies program at the UW Center in Rome.
Giuseppe Tassone moved to Seattle from Italy in 1993. He has been the director of the Italian Language Program of the Dante Alighieri Society of Washington since 1998 and the PLIDA coordinator since 2011. He is a language educator, coordinator, and advocate of Italian language and culture. He has a background in economics and finance (B.A. in Economics), but chooses to specialize in Italian language and culture (M.A. in Italian Studies). He has 20+ years of experience teaching, developing curricula, coordinating, testing, and assessing in public and non-profit organizations (e.g. Seattle University, University of Washington, Shoreline College). Giuseppe reviewed and/or contributed to several Italian language textbooks, such as Da Capo, Oggi in Italia, Avanti, Piazza and Sentieri. He is the author of Ricordati di me, Buongiorno Notte – Italian Films Series by Edizioni Farinelli and Un buon Affare – Italian for Business by Hackett Publishing Company available in print (2016) and e-book (2019). Giuseppe teaches at Seattle University and heads the Italian Section in the Department of Modern Languages and Cultures. Personal interests are: reading, traveling, cinema, economics, politics, playing and listening to music, swimming, biking, gardening and cooking.
E-mail: tassone@danteseattle.org
Roberta was born in Salerno a city located in the region of Campania in Southern Italy where in the ninth century flourished the renowned Schola Medica Salernitana; the forerunner of the modern university medical schools. She holds a Master’s Degree in Economics and Management for Arts, Culture, Media and Entertainment from the Luigi Bocconi University, and a Master’s Degree in Piano from the Giuseppe Verdi Conservatory of Music in Milan. Roberta has been working in the field of arts management since 2008. She has served as a project manager, fundraiser and arts administrator in high-profile nonprofit organizations and music festivals in Italy. She has taught music and Italian language in middle schools, and has held lectures in performing arts management as a teaching assistant at the University of Milan and at the Accademia del Teatro alla Scala. She has performed many solo and chamber music recitals across Italy. She loves classical music, visual arts, reading, traveling, hiking and of course teaching Italian.
E-mail: roberta@danteseattle.org
Giorgio is a native Italian who grew up in the outskirts of Milan. He holds various university degrees including a doctorate in aerospace engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology. He works on engineering research and development projects in the fields of aircraft performance and commercial aviation. He became passionate about teaching and sharing his knowledge of Italy in response to the welcoming and inspiring interest in the Italian language and culture he witnessed and experienced while living in the United States. Throughout the years, Giorgio has taught Italian courses as well as privately tutored business professionals and students from various age groups.
In his free time, Giorgio enjoys photography, hiking, history and mathematics, museums and fine arts, theatre performances, and traveling.
Email: giorgio@danteseattle.org
Gabriella Vagnoli was born in Pisa, Tuscany, home of the famous Leaning Tower. She grew up in a multicultural family thanks to her Brazilian mom and remembers teaching Italian for the first time as a child to her Brazilian cousins. She obtained a Laurea in English and Spanish Language and Literature at the Università degli Studi di Pisa and during her college years spent a year in the University of Reading, UK, studying mainly the works of Shakespeare. After obtaining a Certificate as a Teacher of Italian (DITALS II) at the Università per Stranieri di Siena, she has taught in a full immersion school in Florence, a children's full immersion program in Chicago and a Community College in Illinois.
Besides teaching Italian, she has obtained a BFA in Illustration at Rocky Mountain College of Art and Design and is a published children's book illustrator.
Email: gabriella@danteseattle.org
Tiziana was born and raised in Sardinia, a beautiful Italian island in the Mediterranean Sea. She has always been passionate about foreign languages and cultures, and studied French and German at the Scuola Superiore Interpreti e Traduttori in Milan, where she obtained her first Foreign Languages and Interpreter BA degree. She then pursued her MA in English and German Language and Literature at IULM, one of the most prestigious universities in Milan, Italy for Language and Communication studies.
Tiziana moved to the US in 2000 and started working in the software industry, where she applied her linguistic skills and cultural knowledge to localization and testing projects. She also took on various leadership roles and managed teams of linguists and testers across different countries and time zones. Tiziana is passionate about teaching Italian and sharing her insights into the Italian culture and lifestyle. She has taught from beginner to advanced Italian courses for the most prestigious schools in the Pacific Northwest: The Dante Alighieri Society, Seattle Language Academy and Bellevue College. She also privately tutors American business professionals who want to learn or improve their Italian. She is currently working on her Spanish, as she enjoys learning new languages and cultures.
In her free time, Tiziana likes to read, hike. cook, travel, and spend time with her family and friends.
Email: tiziana@danteseattle.org
Laura was born in Palmanova, in Northern Italy, a star shaped fortress built by the Serenissima Republic of Venice to protect the territory from the invasions of the Hapsburg and the Ottoman Empires. She was raised speaking Italian, French and Friulano (her native Northern Italian dialect). Laura received a Laurea in Linguistics from the Università di Udine where she specialized in Spanish and English literature. Since then she has lived and worked in Holland, Switzerland, Spain, England, America, and Italy. In addition to teaching in our program, Laura is authorized to cover the role of intervistatrice in our PLIDA Examination Board.
E-mail: lauracbolan@danteseattle.org
Francesca is an Italian native, born in Cremona, northern Italy. She holds a laurea in Biology from the University of Padua and Masters of Biology from Eastern Michigan University. She left Italy in 1994 and has lived in New Zealand and the United States. She has a passion for teaching her native language, as a way of maintaining and exploring the Italian language and culture with different eyes. She has taught privately and in many institutions to students of different proficiency levels groups. Francesca is interested in literature, art and design, and in her free time, she likes reading, cooking, and making ceramics.
Email: francesca@danteseattle.org
Damiano is a native of a small countryside town in Northern Italy, about 17 miles away from Padua, a city famous among other things for its university, the fifth-oldest surviving in the world. He received his B.A. and M.A. Cum Laude in Japanese language and culture from Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, while specializing in linguistics and translation. He lived in Japan for three and a half years, where he continued his studies and his sociolinguistic research on (im)politeness in language. While in Japan, he also started working as an Italian teacher, discovering his passion for conveying the beauty of the Italian language and culture abroad.
Email: damiano@danteseattle.org
Nicla is a native of Napoli, Italy. She has a Laurea in Materie Letterarie (degree in humanities) and a Laurea in Pedagogia (degree in Education) from the Università degli Studi di Cassino. She earned her M.A in Italian and her PhD in Comparative Literature from the University of Washington. She has published articles and book chapters on gender and theater as well as politics and religion in Counter-Reformation Italy and in the last years, has been teaching Italian literature, language, and culture in different institutions. In addition to teaching in our program, Nicla is authorized to cover the role of esaminatrice and intervistatrice in our PLIDA Examination Board.
E-mail: nicla@danteseattle.org