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Draft:Giovanna Chädid

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Giovanna Simone Chädid
Official Photo
Born
Giovanna Chädid

(1985-12-06) 6 December 1985 (age 38)
Occupation(s)Writer, Poet, Philosopher, Offensive Software & Hardware Hacker, Malware Coder & Analyst
Websitehttp://y.at/laptop.brain.eye.key.bomb

Giovanna Chädid (born Giovanna Lissette Chädid De Francisco; 06 December 1985) (in 2018 she would change her middle name to Simone) is a contemporary poet, writer, philosopher, hacker, malware coder and analyst.[1] The theme of his work explores a variety of themes, reflecting her diverse interests and perspectives, identity and Self-Reflection. Giovanna delves into questions of identity, self-discovery, and introspection. Her poems often explore the complexities of being human, the search for meaning, and the interplay between inner and outer worlds. Nature and Spirituality almost as a ritualistic way of invoking the human spirit itself, so close to the abyss, in which mythical animals such as the serpent and the jellyfish medusa dwell, its poetry speaks from the bones to the flesh and the ethos. Nature serves as a rich source of inspiration for Chädid. Her poetry celebrates the beauty of darkness, solitude and loneliness dissolve with natural elements. She weaves spiritual and mystical themes into her verses, inviting readers to connect with the universe and their own spirituality. Giovanna's prose and essays are a delirium of exuberance, mastery, delightful playfulness, she laughs at everything, and at the same time, she is very faithful and respectful to an important tradition (not only philosophical, but also literary) that she has read with attention and insight. It is fresh, it is highly intelligent, it is fast and surprising. It is pure subversion, pure lacerating humour. As Juan Gustavo Cobo Borda wrote in review in 2013. As a philosopher, Giovanna navigates the questions of being and the questions concerning modernity and capitalism, she contemplates existence, nihilism, time, through essay and socio-cultural critique metafiction and cybernetic theory from which she studies internet culture and metanarratives, inviting readers to engage in thoughtful and deep reflections.[2] Poesía en voz de sus autoras: Giovanna Chadid.[3][4]

Early life

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Chädid grew up in Bogotá D.C, Colombia in Los Andes Norte, where she grew up with her maternal grandmother, Alicia De Francisco, who worked at Radio Septima in the 1940s in Bogota D.C. as a typist, proofreader and Morse code interpreter (Telegraphist) and her great aunt, Cecilia De Francisco, pianist and hand embroidery artist and her mother, Aura Maria Chädid De Francisco, a professor in Child Pedagogy and Special Education at the Pedagogical University, and occasionally with her great uncle Joaquin De Francisco, Economist at the Javeriana University in Bogota. Daughter and granddaughter of Lebanese, Egyptian and Italian immigrants who arrived in Barranquilla Colombia in the 1940s. As a child, she attended Femenino Gimnasio Moderno School]]. She enjoyed reading comics, and has said that she had an early interest in poetry and computers. At age 9, Chädid started programming and writing at home. She grew up between two worlds, distant but close, or as she herself says, between Punk Bogota and Poetic Beirut, visiting her aunts' family home in Beirut and spending periods of her childhood in the Arab city. In 2000 she graduated from Robert Hook High School, during the following years she dedicated herself to writing poems, and learning about fashion and design. In 2003 she began studying fashion design at the Arturo Tejada Cano School Arturo Tejada Cano where she withdrew a year later and entered The Colombian School of Design and Haute Couture where she specialised in manual embroidery and haute couture, finishing her career as a designer. In 2007 she applied for a scholarship for literary studies with the National University of Colombia. [5] and Idartes and began her career in 2008 as a writer. In 2009 Giovanna began to study a diploma in plastic arts at the National University of Colombia, in that year she created more than twenty works.[6] graduating in 2012 with a degree in literature, Publishing his work in a book published by the National University of Colombia and with the Biennial of Arts programme.[7] and earning another scholarship with NYU New York University[8] at The New School[9] where she would do her masters in creative writing with an emphasis on philosophy and American literature of the second part of the twentieth century.

Literature career

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In September 2011 Chädid held his debut writing with the book of essays 'Anti Poemas' and the book of essays 'Guevonaditas varias' published in Portugal with Portos Editora and became the best seller of the whole web in Porto.[10] Number #1 on Amazon and GoodReads.[11] 2011 Giovanna is part of the Bogota poets festival, Ojo en la tinta fest. [12] That same year he published in Issuu Ensayos y Pretextos, a book in Spanish of short essays on modern life.[13] In July 2011 I published an essay on politics in Germany with the independent collective Los Superdemokraticos and gave a talk at the Luvina bookstore in Bogota called Sujetos Salvajes (Wild Subjects).[14] in 2012 a poem 'End of Intermittent Contact' was published through Semantic Scholar.[15] His work includes the book of essays 'Lo dije ayer y no me recuerdo' ('I said it yesterday and I don't remember'). [16] in 2013 he published one of his poems in the magazine Conexos in Mexico, print and online version.[17] In 2014 Giovanna became the second place winner of the Heptagrama Poetry Prize in Peru with her poem titled, September. That same year she traveled to Peru to read her poem at the award ceremony.[18] in 2015 a poem is published in the digital magazine Juntaversos in Mexico, which is part of his digital book «Tiempo de Incertidumbre» [19] [20] In 2016, one of his poems appeared in the anthology of Mexican poetry and short stories, Tales of Barbary. [21] In 2019 she resurfaces after a time of experimenting with her jewelry brand Flabellum Objkt, a long heritage from ancestral jeweler grandparents in Beirut, and that Giovanna wanted to continue. [22] In 2019 she published an article on human migration in the Mexican magazine and publishing house WARP, which was published digitally and on paper, also in its German Warp version.[23] Also in the same year she published an essay on philosophy and career in the magazine and cultural portal of Bogota, Quira Medios.[24] In 2019, her poem, End of Intermittent Contact, Scenes, is revised and republished by Core UK, in the UK. [25] In 2020 she publishes one of the poems from her new unpublished book, Weltschmerz, in the Peruvian magazine and publishing house Santa Rabia Poetry.[26] Her poem published in Santa Rabia Poetry in Peru, was also published on Spotify in 2020. [27] In 2021, a poem from her unpublished book 'Weltschmerz' was published in audio and read by the author herself, for Fono written «Fonoescritos» on Spotify. [28] In 2021, one of her poems, winner of the Latin American poetry prize in Peru, was republished through The Seattle Star in Seattle USA in English.[29] In 2022 she begins to experiment with fractals and mathematics, and makes a collection of fractals made from mathematical equations, where she uploads them freely for download. [30] In the year 2023, a project begins on Reddit on free literary distribution and free access to knowledge, through a bookstore directory.[31] In 2024 she is part of the Mindignite project as editor and proofreader of the children's book Lucky and the Lion Paws, published in print in the United States. [32] [33]

Worldwide Web

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Giovanna Chädid is the founder of the popular blogsite Malware Medusa an introduction to glitch philosophy, and inspired by author Mark Fisher's K-Punk blog.[34]

As a programmer and hacker Giovanna has stood out for being a leader in the fight for a free internet in the underground world and as can be read on her website: All culture and all knowledge arise from a common experience. Nothing human is new or unique, everything is based on what has been thought, written and materialized by others. Terence already said: “nothing human is alien to me”; everything human concerns us, matters to us and belongs to us. Every work of art, every poem, every philosophy, every music arises from a common experience, from the human experience (which is invariably common) and therefore, more than to an individual, all knowledge and culture belong to humanity. Although in my opinion this is an undeniable ethical reality - constantly reaffirmed by other cultures, by non-Western ways of life, by others - the cult of the individual, so constantly and systematically perpetuated by financial semio-capitalism, has created an apparatus of production and distribution of knowledge that grants authorship and ownership of culture to unique and exclusive entities, whether to a physical or moral person, to a human being or to a company. As Proudhon rightly said: property is theft. Now I, we say: all intellectual property is intellectual theft. For what is the intellect and knowledge of an individual if not the conglomerate of the knowledge of many other individuals? How can a single subject be the absolute owner of a concept, of a sound, of an idea, of a verse, of a life-form? I am convinced that any attempt to appropriate and capitalize a cultural object is oblivion, dispossession, theft and privatization. Thus, against this permanent and systematic dispossession and oblivion that is the intellectual property and copyright system, I, we, have no choice but to resist. We resist by expropriating, liberating, “stealing”, pirating, remembering, returning knowledge and culture to its true owner: to all of us.[35]

References

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  1. ^ "y.at page". 10 October 2023.
  2. ^ "'September at The Seattle Star,' Poetry by Giovanna Chädid Small Blue Library in >Spanish Poetry". Small Blue Library. 3 March 2021.
  3. ^ "Movimiento sobre los escombros poesía". Substack. 3 January 2020.
  4. ^ "Philosopher and Hacker in the poetry of future". Substack.
  5. ^ "UNAL". National University of Colombia.
  6. ^ "De la basura cobran vida sus esculturas". El Tiempo. 28 October 2009.
  7. ^ "UNAL". National University of Colombia. 22 September 2010.
  8. ^ "NYU". New York University.
  9. ^ "The New School". The New School.
  10. ^ "World Art Friends". Corpos Editora.
  11. ^ "GoodReads". GoodReads.
  12. ^ "Ojo en la tinta Fest". Ojo en la tinta. 2012.
  13. ^ "Ensayos y Pretextos". ISSUU. 9 April 2012.
  14. ^ "Los Superdemokraticos". Los Superdemokraticos.
  15. ^ "End of Intermittent Contact". Semantic Scholar.
  16. ^ "Lo dije ayer y no me acuerdo". Goodreads.
  17. ^ "Cuerpo y otros poemas". Conexos. 10 February 2013.
  18. ^ "Heptagrama Award". Heptagrama peru.
  19. ^ "Ruido Material". Juntaversos. 13 February 2015.
  20. ^ "Tiempo de Incertidumbre". Internet Archive. 2019.
  21. ^ "Cuentos de Barbarie". Goodreads.
  22. ^ "Flabellum Objkt". Flabellum Objkt.
  23. ^ "WARP". ISSUU. 15 January 2019.
  24. ^ "Portal Cultural de Bogota". Portal Cultural de Bogota.
  25. ^ Chadid, Giovanna. "Core UK". Core UK.
  26. ^ "Movimiento sobre los escombros". Santa Rabia Poetry. 3 January 2020.
  27. ^ "Movimiento sobre los escombros". Spotify.
  28. ^ "Fonoescritos". Spotify.
  29. ^ "The Seattle Star". The Seattle Star.
  30. ^ "Dodecahedratics". Dodecahedratics on Flickr.
  31. ^ "ZLabs". Reddit.
  32. ^ "Lucky and the Lion Paws". Goodreads.
  33. ^ "Lucky and the Lion Paws". Amazon.
  34. ^ "Malware Medusa". Malware medusa Tumblr Poetics.
  35. ^ "Manifesto Hacker". Substack.
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Category:Colombian Writers Category:Colombian contemporary artists Category:Arab Poets Category:British digital artists Category:1985 births Category:Living people