Ferruccio Ferrazzi
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Ferruccio Ferrazzi

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Benvenuto Ferrazzi (Italian, 1892 - 1969)
Island of Ischia, N/D
Oil on canvas, 25.5 x 35.5 cm
Volgare, dispotico, incapace di amare: il fascino cinico di Napoleone secondo Ferrazzi (lo esalta Krauspenhaar)
Un teppista di successo è il bel titolo dell’ultimo libro di Riccardo Ferrazzi, edito da Arkadia. Libro piacevolissimo, scritto con sapienza e stile asciutto, è un romanzo breve su ciò che l’autore riconosce nel mito di Napoleone Bonaparte, cioè un carattere difficile e violento fin dall’inizio della vita. Ferrazzi scrive un romanzo storico svolgendo il suo tema con eleganza e sense of humour. Napoleone viene ridimensionato, più che abile stratega è stato un giocatore d’azzardo, e si sa, nel gioco spesso si perde e poi si vince ma alla fine, sempre si perde in modo definitivo, destino di chi tira troppo la corda della fortuna. Volgare, ovviamente dispotico, incapace di amare, il grande corso riuscì a conquistare il proprio padrone, con abilità certo, ma anche con faccia tosta smisurata e mancanza di scrupoli. Per Ferrazzi, Napoleone detiene il cinismo necessario per proclamarsi, da colonizzato corso, imperatore dei Francesi. Un uomo che divenne il modello dei tiranni del XX secolo, come loro perdente ma diventato mito perdurante nel tempo.
Franz Krauspenhaar
L'articolo Volgare, dispotico, incapace di amare: il fascino cinico di Napoleone secondo Ferrazzi (lo esalta Krauspenhaar) proviene da Pangea.
from pangea.news http://bit.ly/2SJUODQ
Rigenerazione urbana e valorizzazione immobili, svolto seminario Pd alla Camera
Rigenerazione urbana e valorizzazione immobili, svolto seminario Pd alla Camera
L’impegno del Pd nella legislazione tra recupero e sviluppo urbano. Urbanistica e patrimoni immobiliare: dalla gestione passiva alla valorizzazione. Rigenerare le città ed i territori: dal consumo del suolo al riuso. Il federalismo demaniale e il supporto all’attività dei comuni. Le nuove forme del costruire. L’efficienza energetica. Questi i temi al centro del seminario promosso dal Gruppo Pddel…
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Ferruccio Ferrazzi (Italian,1891-1978)
Self-portrait (Autoritratto), 1912
Oil on canvas, 39,5 x 50 cm

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Ferrazzi e una Lombardia a statuto speciale
Ferrazzi e una Lombardia a statuto speciale
Simone Rasetti – E’ stata presentata oggi a Palazzo Pirelli, nella sede del Consiglio regionale lombardo, la proposta di referendum per la richiesta di statuto speciale per la Regione Lombardia. L’obiettivo dell’iniziativa, avanzata anche dal consigliere regionale Luca Ferrazzi del gruppo consiliare “Maroni Presidente”, è quello di consultare i lombardi sulla possibilità di ottenere maggiori…
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I Hate Women.
I love talent. I love passion. I love empathy. I often, hate women. The former qualities I seek in people, and many times go wasted in women in particular. Hence, I support women. However, I have often found that women don't support me. Many seem to see the world, their careers, their networks as a zero-sum game. As if, when I am aided to do something great it will some how be to the exclusion of my 'connector'. I think we've been programmed that way by our feminist mothers, to compete, to strive, to conquer and win, but the message that got muttled for many of us, is 'go at it alone' and hence, 'sharing is bad'.
'Connector'--- it's an interesting term, one I picked up a few years ago after reading Keith Ferrazzi's, 'Never Eat Alone'. I would consider myself to be a connector, a flame if you will. Not only do I take great joy in connecting the synapses, weaving together people and ideas into an intricate and beautiful web, I also know that I am not extinguished by helping others. To the contrary, I think it only increases the heat of my flame and the size of my web. At the end of the day, I am a woman. And consequently, I feel the need to support women, no matter how misguided, selfish or competitive many may seem. As Hillel once asked, אם אין אני לי מי לי (im ain ani li mi li). "If I am not for myself, who will be for me?" Continuing he queries, "And if I am for myself, what am I? And if not now, when?" I am for me and therefore, I am for women, now and forever. I just wish there were more out there who felt the same--- I'm working on it.
Love, Compassion, Business?
So I picked up Love is the Killer App by Tim Sanders today and am about 50 pages in. I'm having an experience similar to when I started reading Keith Ferrazzi's recent Who's Got Your Back. For me, the effort to "humanize" business, along the lines of Sanders and Ferrazzi, seems like common sense. More than that, it seems like a realignment of real life and a repeat of history.
Global business quickly went from being huge, impersonal, and profit-driven to a relatively small community with the advent of the internet and social media. Businesses can rarely, if ever, make decisions that are quietly suffered by their customers. That can be the restaurant around the corner, or it can be a huge corporation (just look at Gamestop's recent press).
With my own business, I find that, despite the massive technology pulling at us everyday, people still want to be able to sit down and talk. They want to know that someone cares about them, that someone wants what's best for them, and that this person does, in fact, know what he or she is talking about.
Don't get me wrong here -- I am not saying I don't need a book like Love or that I know everything. Far from it. But I can't understand how things like being compassionate with others, treating people with respect, and giving without expectation of receiving are novel concepts to people in the business world. Maybe it's growing up in the deep South, where hospitality is not optional, or maybe it's being a part of this social media generation. Either way, I think these concepts of reciprocity and love, which may have been hidden under the search for profit for a few decades, are quickly resurfacing as keys to success in today's difficult economy.
I'll throw in a parallel no one is expecting here that will show you my roots. John Sommerville, who used to be a professor at my alma mater (Go Gators!) wrote a book a few years ago entitled The Decline of the Secular University. In the book, and through lectures by and conversations with Dr. Sommerville, I've picked up on some nuggets of his research. His theory is this: modern society has de-humanized some very critical areas of our culture (his focus is on the university), and we are slowly making a return to a more holistic view of humanity.
This is happening in business, too. Don't let it pass you by.
What do you think?