Talk:Multimedia

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[http://dodge-gallery.com/cgi-bin/DODGE?s=exhibitions&v=20107231670799676536303116 Unreal City: Dave Cole]: THIS IS FANTASTIC!!  Still trying to figure out how to incorporate it (and generally how to organize our whole darn page).  That is all.  Rebekah -09/12/2012 10:20am
 
[http://dodge-gallery.com/cgi-bin/DODGE?s=exhibitions&v=20107231670799676536303116 Unreal City: Dave Cole]: THIS IS FANTASTIC!!  Still trying to figure out how to incorporate it (and generally how to organize our whole darn page).  That is all.  Rebekah -09/12/2012 10:20am
  
There is no place that appreciates TS Eliot’s poem The Waste Land more than London. This remarkable city has created a Multi-media Walk through Eliot’s Poem. Walkers start at West Ham and follow a route through the East London Cemetery to the Greenway Path and beyond. Through this walk visitors will see and hear different aspects of Eliot’s poem in a different way. Through meaningful landmarks and history people will see things that relate to The Wasteland, i.e. the rose garden at the cemetery where roses grow from cremated ashes and listening to Madame Sosostris turning her Tarot cards. As people continue through this walk there are many different things to see. The walk ends just like the poem past the Saint Mary Woolnoth to the London Bridge. In the middle of the bridge there is a pause and the final lines should be read aloud, “Sweet Thames run softly, til I end my song…  Datta. Dayadhvam. Damyata. Shantih shantih shantih”.  Michelle - 9/12/12 11:35 - Multi-media Walk [http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/jul/30/eliot-waste-land-multimedia-walk multi-media walk]
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There is no place that appreciates TS Eliot’s poem The Waste Land more than London. This remarkable city has created a Multi-media Walk through Eliot’s Poem. Walkers start at West Ham and follow a route through the East London Cemetery to the Greenway Path and beyond. Through this walk visitors will see and hear different aspects of Eliot’s poem in a different way. Through meaningful landmarks and history people will see things that relate to The Wasteland, i.e. the rose garden at the cemetery where roses grow from cremated ashes and listening to Madame Sosostris turning her Tarot cards. As people continue through this walk there are many different things to see. The walk ends just like the poem past the Saint Mary Woolnoth to the London Bridge. In the middle of the bridge there is a pause and the final lines should be read aloud, “Sweet Thames run softly, til I end my song…  Datta. Dayadhvam. Damyata. Shantih shantih shantih”.   
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Multi-media Walk [http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/jul/30/eliot-waste-land-multimedia-walk multi-media walk]
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Michelle -9/12/12 11:35

Revision as of 16:52, 12 September 2012

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