Radio Robida s03e08 / 02.11.2024
In addition to the regular monthly shows, this month Robida's radio session will also host some additional shows!
From the Margins: An arborescent listening and reading room
from 12:00 to 16:15
A four-hour reading of excerpts from a reader Robida prepared for the exhibition Terza Terra at Villa Manin offers multiple entry points into the rethinking of four binary oppositions: nature/culture, individual/collective, centre/margins, and rootedness/rootlessness and the borderlands between them. Each of these oppositions constitutes the (meta)physical tissue of Topolò/Topolove and all of the other places (re)configured throughout the process of Modernity. The purpose of this reader is not to dismantle borders between these terms but to make them porous. The border itself, if porous, unites, and creates affinities between the two sides.
Texts read by Vida Rucli, Elena Rucli, Antônio Frederico Lasalvia, Aljaž Škrlep, Dora Ciccone, Lijuan Klassen, Moritz Gansen, Rebeca Pérez Gerónimo, Jack Bardwell, Sophie Mak-Schram, Margherita Cogoi, Heike Renée de Wit and Sasha van Aalst.
Ignorant Reading Group
at 17:00
Building on the summer reading group sessions led by the diffrakt collective, Robida is launching its own Ignorant reading group. Open to anyone present in Topolò/Topolove who feels like joining, we’ll gather to explore the works of authors unfamiliar to all participants—writers we don’t yet know but are curious to discover together. For our first session, we’ll dive into the work of French philosopher François Laruelle, who passed away on October 28 this year. Živijo! to new encounters and fresh ideas—wish us luck!
Halloween special: listening session of Night of the Living Dead
at 20:00
A few days after Halloween, I wanted to host a listening session of a horror film, revisiting the experience we had on Radio Robida three years ago. Back then, we watched William Castle’s 1959 classic House on Haunted Hill, featuring the iconic Vincent Price. This year, I’ve chosen a film that redefined the genre and laid the foundations for modern horror as we know it.
The year was 1968, when George A. Romero’s debut feature, Night of the Living Dead, exploded onto the scene. Not only did it revolutionize the zombie genre, but it also introduced a new kind of horror cinema—call it paranoid, postmodern or post-Fordist. Before we begin, I will provide a brief introduction to the film and a short exploration of the shift from classical to modern horror. And then, ladies and gentlemen, Night of the Living Dead!