Stories that shape tomorrow: the "Inventing the Future" Lecture Hall at the National Centre RUSSIA
The National Centre RUSSIA invites visitors to the Open Lecture Hall "Inventing the Future: Plots and Stories", which will be held on 7 February. Leading Russian and international visionaries will share their perspectives on what the lifestyle and mindset of the person of tomorrow may look like.
"Inventing the Future" continues the educational Lecture Hall on future scenarios, bringing together key areas of human development, from culture and creativity to science and technology. Several discussions will take place throughout the day:
— 12:00–13:00 — "Education Through Stories": how storytelling transforms forms of education and offers new ways to talk about the past, present and future.
— 13:30–14:30 — the discussion "Stories in Advertising and Consumption": why today it is not the product but emotion and narrative that are sold, and what role stories will play in future consumption models.
— 15:00–16:00 — the discussion "Stories in Cinema and Video Games": what unites these industries and how narrative language and visual technologies are evolving.
— 16:30–18:00 — master classes by chefs in the Gastronomic Rows of the National Centre RUSSIA, featuring food-of-the-future tasting sets and stories behind the origins of recipes.
Registration for the Open Lecture Hall "Inventing the Future: Plots and Stories" is available on the website russia.ru in the "Events" section. Come and become part of the conversation about the future today.
The event will be accompanied by a storyteller character — Alice from the Future — created by the KROLIKI team at the First Neurocontent Cup and later becoming the symbol of the "Inventing the Future" project.
The first episode of the podcast "Open Dialogue on Air" is now available on the website of the National Centre RUSSIA, Rrussia.ru, as well as on major video platforms.
The development strategy of the Vologda region is centred on the individual and their future.
The Vologda region has already ranked among the top three leading regions of Russia by the number of tourists during the winter holidays, second only to Moscow and Saint Petersburg.