Cookie Control

Questo sito o gli strumenti terzi da questo utilizzati si avvalgono di cookie necessari al funzionamento ed utili alle finalità illustrate nella cookie policy. Se vuoi saperne di più o negare il consenso a tutti o ad alcuni cookie, consulta la cookie policy. Chiudendo questo banner, scorrendo questa pagina, cliccando su un link o proseguendo la navigazione in altra maniera, acconsenti all’uso dei cookie.

I Cookie sono costituiti da porzioni di codice installate all'interno del browser che assistono il Titolare nell’erogazione del servizio in base alle finalità descritte. Alcune delle finalità di installazione dei Cookie potrebbero, inoltre, necessitare del consenso dell'Utente.

By using our site you accept the terms of our Privacy Policy.

(One cookie will be set to store your preference)
(Ticking this sets a cookie to hide this popup if you then hit close. This will not store any personal information)

About this tool

About Cookie Control

Tactile books

Tactile books We read not just for the fun of reading, but also to receive new stimuli in order to understand the world around us.
Fabio Fornasari

Children are perfect explorers right from birth.

But they need more than sight: they need to touch, hold, handle, have physical contact with things.

For children, sight isn’t the end, but the starting point, the generator of stimuli. Not enough on its own, but needed to direct the act of firsthand knowledge to the world around them.

Detail of book "Il nido del piccolo colibrì" - design by Chiara Sarri

Raniero Regni and Leonardo Fogassi study the relationship between neuroscience and the teachings of Maria Montessori, and expand the concept presented in Montessori’s “The Child’s Mind,” according to which children’s brains evolve by means of movement. For the philosopher Regni and the neuroscientist Fogassi, “action and perception influence each other and in effect become one and the same.” And as Luigi Paladin, librarian-psychologist, says in his paper on children’s literature, “exploring is a primal impulse, like hunger and speaking.”

This is the impulse that brings so many people to take part in every edition of the national competition “Tocca a te” (“It’s your turn”), promoted by the non-profit Federazione Nazionale delle Istituzioni pro Ciechi, to explore the production of tactile books, to experience writing and reading not only visually but also tactually.

 

The “Tocca a te” competition invites young authors, young artists, teachers, and parents to create a book to be read with the hands.

Not just prototypes of tactile books, but multi-material explorations that investigate the possibility of narrating and reading by means of matter.

Each page of the tactile book becomes a symbolic cognitive space, limited by the size of the page but always an active space for our hands that read.

Book "L'apparato digerente" - Andrea Sanchez Ramirez, best teaching book, "Premio Francesco Cavazza”

It’s a productive space, for the reader and for the designer.

A space for understanding how to read not just illustrations of the world but for learning how to explore the world itself, with your whole body and an open mind. This is true for everyone: We read not just for the fun of reading, but also to receive new stimuli in order to understand the world. Therefore, the jury isn’t looking for the most beautiful book, the one that best expresses haptic reading, but instead tactile books that can stimulate and inspire the visually impaired in their search for knowledge.

The following link to the page of the Federation’s website presents the winners and explanations: https://libritattili.prociechi.it/concorsi/concorso-nazionale-tocca-a-te/

 

Previous | Next

Table of Contents

"Beyond" thirty years

Current Events

Activities

Health

Music

Culture