Hi everybody! This is my last time writing this. When I started to write this blog, was with a feeling of exciting, but months later... I'm here, exhausted, with a lot of homeworks to do and terrible wish of sleep all the day.
I don't enjoy a lot this experience, but if I think this, could be worst jaja. If someone ask me about the learning... it's right, I learn a lot of things writing this blog, maybe because the young people learn to enjoy to be sitting in front of a computer. It's really weird.
I don't really like this public eye, because remove the romanticism of other way jaja, I don't know, maybe I don't like this space to write because it's pretend get the poetic style, when it's another expression of the hurried modernization, another manifest of "vorágine".
Nevertheless, I don't support the idea of change this space because for learn english it's really good. I'm obligated to learn some words in english and I will remember for a long time.
But after this I have to write a long homework for university, it's time to write another kind of words.. I hope that my friend Claude help me with the work. See you, dear reader.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WOrlb6NrI8I
miércoles, 25 de junio de 2014
miércoles, 4 de junio de 2014
CROSSROADS
Crossroads is a 1986 musical drama film starring Ralph Macchio, Joe Seneca and Jami Gertz, inspired by the legend of blues musician Robert Johnson. According to legend, as a young man living on a plantation in rural Mississippi, Robert Johnson was branded with a burning desire to become a great blues musician. He was "instructed" to take his guitar to a crossroad near Dockery Plantation at midnight. There he was met by a large black man (the Devil) who took the guitar and tuned it. The "Devil" played a few songs and then returned the guitar to Johnson, giving him mastery of the instrument.
I like Crossroads, because represent the mysterious of blues, the spirit and feelings of blues. When I heared about Crossroads I didn't want to watch it, because it is a very old movie... Usually I follow recently movies, because it has better definition and is more amazing, but Crossroads can imply you with the story line. The constant duel, the clever boy against the devil, for the mystical power and become the best blues guitarrist in the story... they always want to became the best.
My favorite scene is when Macchio has a guitar duel against Steve Vai, the ringer guitarrist .. and Macchio won playing classical music on a electric guitar..was awesome.
Another scene that makes me enjoy a lot the movie is when Macchio, play in an old place, the song is "Feeling Bad Blues", and that song can break my heart ..
Feeling Bad Blues in Crossroads.
I like Crossroads, because represent the mysterious of blues, the spirit and feelings of blues. When I heared about Crossroads I didn't want to watch it, because it is a very old movie... Usually I follow recently movies, because it has better definition and is more amazing, but Crossroads can imply you with the story line. The constant duel, the clever boy against the devil, for the mystical power and become the best blues guitarrist in the story... they always want to became the best.
My favorite scene is when Macchio has a guitar duel against Steve Vai, the ringer guitarrist .. and Macchio won playing classical music on a electric guitar..was awesome.
Another scene that makes me enjoy a lot the movie is when Macchio, play in an old place, the song is "Feeling Bad Blues", and that song can break my heart ..
Feeling Bad Blues in Crossroads.
domingo, 1 de junio de 2014
Enzo Faletto
When I think in Enzo Faletto, my mind imagine a man with a fantastic brain and a awesome power of observation... but I never read a book by Enzo Faletto :c, my admiration for Enzo come from the reference of teachers in University.
Enzo Faletto was a chilean sociologist and , he was born on July 14, 1937 and he studied History in the "Universidad de Chile" and Sociology in the Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales.
Fernando Henrique Cardoso and Enzo Faletto published Dependency and Development in Latin America in 1969, the first academic statement of dependency theory. In it, Cardoso and Faletto argue that
“economic development has frequently depended on favorable conditions for exports.”
Dependency and Development in Latin America was one of the most important books of 20th century.
In 1973 he moved to ECLAC where he held important positions as a consultant to the international body, maintaining its link with FLACSO, returning in 1990 to teaching at the University of Chile, specifically the Department of Sociology, where he served until his last days.
Enzo Faletto died on 2003, leaving a fantastic legacy in Latin America and sociology.
Suscribirse a:
Entradas (Atom)