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  1. Galleries
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  4. » different cultures (?)

 
different cultures (?)...

Donne

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avatarsenior
sent on October 19, 2017 (14:47)


This comment is too long to be automatically translated, so it will be shown in its original language (Italian)  

Click here to translate the comment in English [en]


grazie a tutti davvero per i vostri bellissimi commenti e per le vostre osservazioni. anche a me sono piaciute molto le geometrie create dalle linee sul pavimento e la colonna. Mi è piaciuta molto anche l'ombra che cade sulle signore sedute mentre le occidentali camminano fiere alla luce del sole e lo sguardo delle signore "indiane" verso le occidentali...
è un'immagine scattata a dubai, non ho idea di dove siano le signore sedute ma è probabile che siano indiane (@GA). è in archivio da circa 1 anno e anch'io non riesco a leggerla in un unico modo. vorrei sperare che la chiave di lettura possa essere il bambino... unica cosa comune senza se e senza ma tra i due mondi (anche se in quello occidentale non presente in questo scatto). ma mi fermo qui...
vi ringrazio davvero di cuore a tutti per i vostri bellissimi commenti! ognuno di voi ha notato/aggiunto qualcosa di nuovo su questo scatto che a me era sfuggito e questo mi fa enormemente piacere!
grazie!



avatarsenior
sent on October 19, 2017 (18:51) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Great, Ale, this one of your last, best shot, probably "western women" did not get to the point of the photo, that is, a bit more. It does not take the quality of a very successful shot. A good greeting.

Savior

avatarsenior
sent on October 19, 2017 (20:04) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

hi sasa. you are right for the position and in fact I also have that photo you say with the tallest ladies. but in the meantime the Indian lady had turned on and lost this interaction that in my view had been created with the "Westerners". so I preferred this. :-D
thanks for the passage! See you soon!

avatarsenior
sent on October 20, 2017 (20:17) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

The apparent irreversibility of a "certain world" and the typical frenzy of the Westerners.
Well remarked by that line of delimitation provided by the dark strip of flooring.
Form and substance.
You are a Great.

domenico

avatarsenior
sent on October 21, 2017 (0:44) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

a scene of great visual quality, the two 'cultures' divided by a line on the pavement and an unseen, the one of prejudice and diversity, which often frightens those who are afraid to know and immerse themselves in new experiences.
image that communicates, for this very good
compliments
Hello
Matthew

user32529
avatar
sent on October 21, 2017 (13:26) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

The pavement creates beautiful lines,
and "different cultures" are well placed between these lines.
Great B & W
In short: I LIKE :-D
Congratulations Ale
hello Mimmo ;-)

avatarsenior
sent on October 23, 2017 (8:20) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

What matters most is the setting with a perfect insertion of human presence in space.
Gianni :-)

avatarsupporter
sent on October 23, 2017 (21:59) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Image that captures ... well-composed and well-structured ..... tells the social and cultural differences .... it tells the profound change we are experiencing and that will surely lead us to be a richer society inside .... the the fears that today many live are the result of misunderstanding that will disappear in the long run ....
The human being by nature is afraid of change ... but as soon as it happens ... everything forgets ....
Great Friend

avatarjunior
sent on October 25, 2017 (17:44) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

I like so much compliments

avatarsenior
sent on October 26, 2017 (11:19) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

thanks to everyone for your beautiful comments! I'm glad you shared your thoughts on what the picture would want to represent. I appreciate it very much and in great part I share it. I would like to be optimistic as a naca, hoping that one day the misunderstanding will disappear, but as history teaches us, racism in the broad sense, that is, fear / hatred of diversity of any kind, has always been. yet we have a story of several thousand years ...
I still hold on that child, held tight in the arms of my mother. I hope that it will be let go, that it will be given the opportunity to study, to travel and to live the diversity. just so you can find out how beautiful it is.
thank you again to everyone!

user107253
avatar
sent on October 26, 2017 (16:57) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

After the careful analysis of Andrea I share (and from which I was fascinated) there is little to say! One thing, though, struck me more than anything. The attitude. That firm, almost immobile posture of women sitting with the baby, which also reflects a bit about the "conception" of women in their culture (wife and devoted mother), and the contrast to the dynamic movement of the other three women (that of the center seems almost embarrassed) to reflect in this case also the typical figure of a western woman, independent and proud. Beautifully also the game of "looks" (in effect not even seen) that is created between the woman sitting on the right (which perhaps more than looks looks eyebrows) and the woman walking in the middle.
What else to say? An exceptional shot Alepou lends itself to infinite readings ... compliments :-)

avatarsupporter
sent on October 30, 2017 (19:21) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Beautiful composition and contrast of cultures you've got to grasp.

avatarsupporter
sent on November 10, 2017 (9:30) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Beautiful the PDR, I also love it for cutting and toning, congratulations Ale.
Hi, Rod ;-)

user6400
avatar
sent on November 10, 2017 (10:20) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

I would just like to add to the chorus of compliments!

avatarsenior
sent on November 10, 2017 (10:52) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

True, two different cultures. On the one hand women with children and on the other women without children ...
Igor

avatarsenior
sent on November 12, 2017 (9:48) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Thanks also to you guys for your good comment. I have repeatedly re-read the reflections of everyone and I was wondering if the description of romy was so different to that of Igor ... Maybe there are two ways to say the same thing, maybe complementary or gorse are opposed. Only you know it but if it comes to implementing your thinking we are here ... :-D
As I said earlier that baby for me is the key to reading even though I still do not know how it is ...

user107253
avatar
sent on November 12, 2017 (10:52)


This comment is too long to be automatically translated, so it will be shown in its original language (Italian)  

Click here to translate the comment in English [en]


Se dovessi dare un'interpretazione al commento di Igor potrei leggerlo in due modi. Il primo è come dire "si...l'unica differenza è che le donne a sinistra hanno il bambino e quelle a destra no" senza attribuire alcun pregiudizio o giudizio su l'una e l'altra cultura, anzi senza fare alcuna distinzione tra culture. La seconda interpretazione aggiunge la componente del giudizio, come a dire che la cultura di sinistra è ancora orientata ai valori della famiglia, mentre quella di destra li sta perdendo a favore dell'individualismo, dell'egoismo forse. Ma magari sono entrambe giuste o entrambe sbagliate le mie interpretazioni. Forse queste interpretazioni sono quello che ci leggo io, anche se aggiungo anche un aspetto positivo che è nella libertà di scelta. Qualunque sia la cultura, fondamentale per me è il libero arbitrio e il rispetto per chi vuole (a questo punto) vivere in modo diverso dal nostro. La libertà è forse la più grande utopia di questo mondo.
Buona domenica Sorriso
Romina


avatarsupporter
sent on November 12, 2017 (11:02) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Congratulations Ale,
beautiful composition and beautiful b / n!
Hi Paul

avatarsenior
sent on November 12, 2017 (15:12)


This comment is too long to be automatically translated, so it will be shown in its original language (Italian)  

Click here to translate the comment in English [en]


ciao Romy e grazie per questo secondo passaggio... è un discorso molto complicato in effetti e non mi sento in grado di interpretare il commento di Igor. Probabilmente solo lui può. ma un accenno di giudizio o forse pregiudizio l'avevo letto anche nel tuo commento quando dicevi "la "concezione" della donna nella loro cultura (moglie e madre devota), e la contrapposizione all'andatura dinamica delle altre tre donne (quella al centro sembra quasi impettita addirittura) a rispecchiare anche in questo caso la tipica figura di donna occidentale, indipendente e fiera". sicuro che le donne occidentali non siano anche devote alla famiglia o che le donne indiane non siano indipendenti e fiere??? MrGreen
le mie sono solo considerazioni fini a se stesse ma sono tutte le domande che mi sono venute in mente mentre guardavo ed elaboravo lo scatto al quale non riesco a dare risposta.
nella mia testa, voglio pensare che quel bambino, anche se con "modalità" diverse, è quel anello di congiunzione tra le mamme/donne delle due culture. un punto che accomuna tutte le donne e che le rende uniche... ma attenzione, non mi riferisco al bambino in se stesso come oggetto ma alla possibilità della maternità! poi la scelta consapevole o come lo chiami te libero arbitrio può essere un elemento distintivo ma la possibilità di poter dare continuità a questo nostro genere umano è forse il potere più grande che la natura abbia voluto dare alle donne.

Paolo, grazie mille anche a te per il commento a questa foto!



avatarsenior
sent on November 12, 2017 (15:35) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

I had already appreciated and commented on it, but being a picture of extraordinary communicative power does not stop feeding the comparison
if I have interpreted your thoughts well, I think you are right: we are more similar than it may appear, often the cages and the walls are in our heads before in concrete reality ... with this, no one is so naive to think that the ' integration is easy, but contact points exist and reside in our common nature of human beings, regardless of the culture each one belongs to
the question mark you put between two parentheses is eloquent
perhaps the new generations will succeed
Hi Michele


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