"Thieves of Libraries 2025" (Ladri di Biblioteche 2025 in Italian) doesn't seem to refer to a widely known event or publication as of my last update. However, I can craft an interesting text based on the concept, exploring themes related to libraries, knowledge, and perhaps a speculative or futuristic angle.
Nella primavera del 2025, tre persone sono state arrestate con l’accusa di essere ladri di biblioteche specializzati in archivi del Novecento. Avevano rubato dall’archivio di una fondazione privata 12 lettere inedite di Cesare Pavese. Il valore stimato: 1,2 milioni di euro. Come furono scoperti? Un’intelligenza artificiale addestrata a riconoscere le filigrane della carta anni '40 ha beccato le lettere in vendita su un forum criptato.
La trappola identitaria by Yascha Mounk and Corpo in figure by Adriana Cavarero. Memorie di Dirk Raspe
In 2025, the phrase ladri di biblioteche (library thieves) evokes a strange, nostalgic romance. It brings to mind Umberto Eco’s The Name of the Rose or the obsessive collectors of the 20th century who stole incunabula for the smell of aging paper and the thrill of possession. However, as we navigate the mid-2020s, the definition of the "library thief" has mutated. Today’s theft is rarely about a leather-bound tome slipped inside a trench coat; it is about data, silence, and the desperate preservation of analog history in a hyper-digital world.
The project prioritizes "heavy" intellectual content over commercial fiction, specifically targeting: Philosophy & Theory
Come scriveva lo scrittore messicano Paco Ignacio Taibo II, fondatore della :