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Inspiration from 100 years ago: Visit Labor Arts Online.

October 21, 2011 in Arts and Literature, Civil Resistance

Visit the Labor Arts Collection of photographs, paintings, banners, songs, poems, etc. It is a wonderful collection.  Following are a few examples from their labor cartoons.

 



So this is progress:

 

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    Talking Pictures

    October 13, 2011 in Arts and Literature

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      Hang onto your 10 gallon hats! Dallas is making a comeback.

      October 10, 2011 in Entertainment, Media

      Jesse Metcalfe and Brenda Strong to join original cast of Larry Hagman, Patrick Duffy and Linda Gray in continuation of the soap, Dallas.

      Channel 5 has bought the right to the remake of the 1980′s soap, Dallas.  The original series ran for 13 years until 1991.  The makers of the new show, which will air on TNT in the USA have promised “nat a remake but a continuation which will feature the next generation of Ewing and will continue the battle.

      The show is expected to air on Channel 5 late next year following its US transmission in the summer.

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        The Life in a Day (of people from around the world)

        July 24, 2011 in Arts and Literature, Media

        Life in a Day is a documentary film project born out of a partnership between YouTube, Ridley Scott Associates and LG electronics, announced on July 6, 2010. Users sent in videos of themselves on July 24, 2010, and then Ridley Scott produced the film and edited the videos into a film with director Kevin MacDonald and film editor Joe Walker, consisting of footage from some of the contributors. All chosen footage authors are credited as co-directors.
        The completed film is 94 minutes 57 seconds long and includes scenes from 4,500 hours of footage in 80,000 submissions from 140 nations. The completed film debuted at the Sundance Film Festival on January 27, 2011 and the premiere was streamed live on YouTube.  The film’s music was written by British composer and producer Harry Gregson-Williams, along with Matthew Herbert. The film’s opening song, written by Herbert, was performed by British singer-songwriter Ellie Goulding. ] On January 24, 2011, National Geographic Films announced that it had received the distribution rights for the film.

        According to  http://www.youtube.com/user/lifeinaday a sneak preview of the film opens today July 24, 2011 and in select theaters July 29.

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          The truth is not always welcome.

          June 26, 2011 in Arts and Literature

          A Story of Censorship – June 26, Anniversary of the Publication of “The Lottery”

          Shirley Jackson- Photo credit Wiki Commons

          On June 26, 1948, Shirley Jackson’s short story “The Lottery” was published in The New Yorker.  It has been ranked as one of the most famous short stories in American literature. Response to the story was outstandingly negative. Subscribers to The New Yorker canceled their subscriptions and hate mail poured in all summer. The story was banned in the Union of South Africa.*

          In her story Jackson contrasted the details of contemporary small town American life with an annual ritual known as “the lottery.” It takes place a small village of about 300 residents. Children gather stones as the adult townsfolk assemble for their annual event, that in the local tradition has been practiced to ensure a good harvest. In the first round of the lottery, the head of each family draws a small slip of paper; Bill Hutchinson gets the one slip with a black spot, meaning that his family has been chosen. In the next round, each Hutchinson family member draws a slip, and Bill’s wife Tessie—who had arrived late—gets the marked slip. In keeping with tradition, which has been abandoned in at least some other neighboring communities, Tessie is then stoned to death by everyone present as a sacrifice.

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          *Union of South Africa

          The politicking behind the scenes for the formation of the Union of South Africa allowed the foundations of Apartheid to be laid.  On May 31, 1910 the Union of South Africa was formed under British dominion. It was exactly eight years after the signing of the Treaty of Vereeniging, which had brought the Second Anglo-Boer War to an end. Each of the four unified states was allowed to keep its existing franchise qualifications.  Cape Colony was the only one which permitted voting by (property owning) non-whites.

          Whilst is it argued that Britain hoped that the ‘non-racial’ franchise contained in the constitution courtesy of the Cape would eventually be extended to the whole of the Union, it is hardly likely that this was truly believed possible.

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          In the San Francisco Chronicle on July 22, 1948 Shirley Jackson offered the following explanation to persistent queries from her readers about her intentions:

          Explaining just what I had hoped the story to say is very difficult. I suppose, I hoped, by setting a particularly brutal ancient rite in the present and in my own village to shock the story’s readers with a graphic dramatization of the pointless violence and general inhumanity in their own lives. [Note from iflizwerequeen:  even this brief explanation of her writing is out of character for Jackson.]

          Jackson’s husband, literary critic Stanley Hyman, wrote of her work that ”she consistently refused to be interviewed, to explain or promote her work in any fashion, or to take public stands and be the pundit of the Sunday supplements.  She believed that her books would speak for her clearly enough over the years.”  He insisted that the darker aspects of Jackson’s works were fitting symbols for our distressing world of the concentration camp and the Bomb and that they mirror humanity’s Cold War-era fears.

          Hyman said that his wife “was always proud that the Union of South Africa banned ‘The Lottery’ and she was satisfied that they at least understood the story.”

          ________________________________________________________

          Shirley Jackson knew that people don’t like it when you pull back the curtain or disturb the dust of their myths.  Apparently she didn’t give a damn. The world needs a lot more Shirley Jacksons.

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            Donald Duck Made His Debut on this day in 1934

            June 9, 2011 in Arts and Literature

            The Wise Little Hen is a Walt Disney’s Silly Symphonies cartoon, based on the fairy tale The Little Red Hen. This cartoon marked the debut of Donald Duck. Donald and his friend Peter Pig try to avoid work by faking stomach aches until Mrs. Hen teaches them the value of labor. This cartoon was released on June 9, 1934. It was animated by Art Babbitt, Dick Huemer, Dick Lundy, and Ward Kimball  and directed by Wilfred Jackson.  It was also adapted as a Sunday comic strip by Ted Osborne and Al Taliaferro.  [SOURCE: WIKI]

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              Happy Birthday Fats, wherever you may be!

              May 21, 2011 in Music

              On this day, more than 100 years ago in 1904, Fats Waller was born.  Fats left us in 1943–long before many of us were even born.

              I thought in a tribute to Fats that the most appropriate of his songs to play on this Day of Apocalypse would be “There is Going to be the Devil to Pay”

              It’s a good thing that Fats started early because he was only 39 when he died. Fats Waller started playing the piano when he was six and graduated to the organ of his father’s church four years later.

              His playing once put him at risk of injury. Waller was kidnapped in Chicago leaving a performance in 1926. Four men bundled him into a car and took him to the Hawthorne Inn, owned by gangster Al Capone. Fats was ordered inside the building, and found a party in full swing. Gun to his back, he was pushed towards a piano, and told to play. A terrified Waller realized he was the “surprise guest” at Al Capone’s birthday party, and took comfort that the gangsters didn’t intend to kill him. According to rumor, Waller played for three days. When he left the Hawthorne Inn, he was very drunk, extremely tired, and had earned thousands of dollars in cash from Capone and other party-goers as tips.

              He was very versatile.  Waller performed Bach   organ pieces for small groups on occasion. Waller influenced many pre-bop jazz pianists such as Count Basie.  Waller contracted pneumonia and died on a cross country train trip near Kansas City, Missouri on December 15, 1943. [SOURCE FOR FACTS: WIKI]

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                Time Lapse Video of Paris without the People

                May 20, 2011 in Arts and Literature

                kdhg

                Le Flâneur (music by The XX) from Luke Shepard on Vimeo.

                Luke Shepard, a student at the American University of Paris, American began working on Le Flaneur as part of a project for school, but it quickly took on a life of its own. He used a Nikon D90 DSLR camera to take over 2,000 photos of Paris at night, and then used Adobe After Effects and Premiere Pro to produce this impressive tour of a world that most of us rarely see – Paris without Parisians. In English, “flaneur” translates roughly as “stroller,” “loafer,”  or perhaps “aimless walker,”  and, in an interview with National Geographic Traveler, Shepard explained that he was  inspired to shoot these images in part by late-night pleasure rides on his bicycle.

                (Note: Some viewers may prefer to watch with the volume off, as the chase scene-ready soundtrack detracts a bit from the eerie sense of a virtually deserted city.  For more time-lapse photography, check out these videos of MeccaNew York City, and the Milky Way.)

                SOURCE

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                  Musings regarding the Corporate Centrist Democrats and the Tea Party/Republicans

                  May 19, 2011 in Arts and Literature

                  The two remind me of a tale that was written by Saki over 100 years ago. Saki is the pseudonym for English writer Hector Hugh Munro who is known for his satirical political sketches collected as “The Westminster Alice” in 1902.

                  The particular tale that I reference is titled “The Saint and the Goblin”.

                  It is the story of a conversation that the statue of a saint and the statue of a goblin have in a garden.

                  One day a silver coin accidentally falls out of the mouth of a crow flying overhead and lands on the base of the statue of the Saint.

                  It was an answer to his prayers because he had been worried about the church mice who were so poor. He told the goblin that he was going to appear in a dream of the vergeress who sweeps the floors of the cathedral showing her where the money is and instructing her in the dream to find the coin and use it to purchase some corn to put at his feet. Then the mice could come and eat the corn.

                  The goblin protested, claiming that it was the function of church mice to be poor.

                  The saint statue thought about it more. “Perhaps it would be better if I ordered candles to be place on my shrine.”

                  “Candles would be more orthodox,” said the Goblin.

                  “More orthodox, certainly,” agreed the Saint, “and the mice could have the ends to eat; candle-ends are most fattening.”

                  Instead of buying corn or using the money for herself, the vergeress looped a string around it and hung it on the neck of the statue.

                  The church mice were as poor as ever. But that was their function.
                  Ah to have the conscience of a goblin–perhaps that’s the solution to peace and happiness.

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                    Portland Cello Project

                    May 16, 2011 in Arts and Literature

                    Portland Cello Project – ‘Denmark’ from Two Penguins on Vimeo.

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