
Overview
Julius Caesar is a masterpiece by the Bard that, by telling us a story of ancient Rome, becomes a very current metaphor of power. Shakespeare declines this metaphor by making us understand the ruthlessness of those who, out of ambition, pursue maximum power. Ruthlessness that leads to betrayal and even Brutus' parricide of Caesar. Both the murdered father and the murderous son are the losers, while Mark Antony and Octavian are triumphant and take advantage of the bloodbath to affirm the supremacy of political power. The challengers are the 5th E of the Romita scientific high school in Campobasso and the 5th B of the Claudio Cavalleri scientific high school in Castano Primo.
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18 - 1Il postino di Neruda (di Antonio Skármeta) February 07, 2015
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18 - 2La bolla di componenda (di Andrea Camilleri) February 14, 2015
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18 - 3Amsterdam (di Ian McEwan) February 21, 2015
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18 - 4Giulio Cesare (di William Shakespeare) February 28, 2015
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18 - 5Sostiene Pereira (di Antonio Tabucchi) March 07, 2015
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18 - 6Il ballo (di Irene Nemirovsky) March 14, 2015
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18 - 7Il giocatore (di Fëdor Dostoevskij) March 21, 2015
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18 - 8Franny e Zooey (di Jerome D. Salinger) March 28, 2015
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18 - 9L'opera da tre soldi (di Bertolt Brecht) April 04, 2015
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18 - 10Il nostro agente all'Avana (di Graham Greene) April 11, 2015
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18 - 11Un anno sull'Altipiano (di Emilio Lussu) April 18, 2015