Class Blog for ENG 1131:1363

Writing Through Media
University of Florida
Fall 2010
Instructor: Lauren Glenn
Blog Assignments will be posted weekly.
Student responses will be posted (almost) every Friday.
See Blog links to the right for individual student blogs.

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Example Project One: MultiMedia Blog

Section One: Narrative Through Images:
"Next Door Neighbors"
[Insert Audio Clip]







Section Two: Reflection on Image/Text Collision
Commentary: When we place images together, they can form a sort of narrative -- or rather, we concoct our own narratives out of images that appear in succession. What story does the above series of photographs tell?

The order of images suggest certain things to you, the reader. Since I put the map and the golf course images first, you might assume that the images following those take place within (0r near) this community I have identified at the beginning.

The content of the images also suggest certain themes. Since I have chosen to include images that depict extreme poverty (as we know it in the U.S.), you might assume .... (fill in the blank).

But I follow the street images with images of people smiling. What does this suggest? It might suggest that there are people within this community that can help those in poverty. It might mean that monetary wealth is not the determinant of human happiness and comfort. It might mean that these people have found refuge within the community building in picture #6. But what about that last image -- the one of the church? Why is it at the end and what does the progression from map to street to people to building suggest? Well, as the reader, that is up to you to interpret. Without words to tell you what these images are of you have to construct your own meanings (i.e., you have to fill in the blanks) to understand this narrative of images.

In this course, we are interested in the intersection of different types of texts. For the first few weeks, we will be discussing how diverse forms of media interact to create narratives. This means that we will be talking about how artists, filmmakers, writers, etc. use images and words TOGETHER to tell stories. We will also talk about how the juxtaposition of such media forms can be interpreted in different ways. Lastly, you will create your own narrative using images AND words in the form of a multimedia blog.

This blog entry serves as an example of Project One. In this first section, I have chosen to show you the images first. I did this to illustrate the point that images can be interpreted a variety of ways when they are not accompanied with words that attempt to explain them. This can be a very beneficial thing depending on your objective as an artist. There is one thing I want you to think about as you go about this project: when we add captions or narratives that explain images, do the images lose some of their communicative power? Do they become merely illustrations? Are they confined to the meaning that accompanies the words beside them?

For the next section, I will demonstrate the juxtaposition of images and text in a narrative blog format. The following blog entry was written by Grady Newton, an artist/teacher who lives in Salado, Texas. The pictures from above were all taken from the trip that he describes below, but now the images are embedded in the text.

Section Three: Narrative Through Images AND Text

EveryTrail: On the same trip, Rolly Correa tracked their trip using EveryTrail, an iphone app that uses GPS navigation to track the travelers' location and upload photos according to location. This multimedia format combines visual images (the map, photographs) with written words (captions, explanations) in a digital format. Go here to see more images of this trip: http://www.everytrail.com/view_trip.php?trip_id=680018&code=12683d5844c522d31634cbf5ff18e57b


Hurled Over a Distant Ocean
By: Grady Lewis Newton

Experiences on a mission trip to a third world country take time to digest and sort into a language that can be empathetically deciphered by those willing to listen. One can only highlight parts of days, pieces of conversations, and images that will be forever embedded in the observer’s memory.
















Some images are merely interesting;









some quite novel; some echo haunting, black clouds of injustice, poverty, and hopelessness;









and some gloriously reflect the smiling visage of God.














Kenya is a proud, magnificent, lumbering beast. She is pierced with jade and gold jewelry of past civilizations, tattooed with waving banana forests and cool blue mountains, fed by free roaming lions and giraffes, scarred by civil unrest, shackled with corruption, yet fitted with an elaborate headdress of knowledge-hungry citizens. She ambles forward through a maze of English and Swahili syntax and collides head-on with Western culture.







Her myriad needs are apparent and beg for redress.








So why would anyone want to leave the security, safety, and comforts of small-town, USA to travel so far to an unknown place to see strange sights and people? For me, I can only state two reasons: 1) precisely to follow my own innate yearning to leave the security, safety, and comforts of my small home town to see strange sights and people and 2) to heed the nudging voice of God to… just go.




I heard of a traveler besieged and robbed on a distant highway in a distant land. Passersby ignored his torn cloak and moans of pain. We know the story. It is about caring for a neighbor. A Samaritan walked along the same road, saw the man, bound his wounds, attended him to the next town, procured a room for him, and lent him money against his return.


There is a road closer to our homes. Across the access road paralleling Interstate I35 is an oozing hot asphalt street leading to a trailer park. A middle-aged man walks the road who has not worked in three months and can no longer afford cigarettes, a change of underwear, or a meal for his four children. Neither is there a gesture of hope for his anxious wife. Oh yea… he is there….a neighbor…



Another dusty road meanders through the Kenyan hillsides…. The road is deeply furrowed by two-wheeled ox-driven carts…A 15 year old head of the household stands with his three little sisters in front of their splintered wood and corrugated tin shack. Both parents have died of AIDS. The girls sleep together on a tattered blanket on the dirt floor.The boy rests in an adjoining room in a hammock. A wire strung across the room serves as his closet. A tiny family room houses a homemade wooden table and two rickety chairs. Nailed on one wall is a faded portrait of Jesus. Facing their shelter is a small two-room wooden plank shed. The left side shelters two goats, and the other serves as a kitchen. In it, a dirt mound is topped with scavenged pieces of lumber and bush twigs for fire. A dirty black pot sits on dead ashes. The boy must find some bananas today. A calm but unsure look resides upon his face.

Oh yeah… he is there…across an ocean and across a continent…still a neighbor…

We cannot always pick the persons we encounter. Do miles or language or race or economic situation bar us one from another? Are my neighbors only in my community?


A recent journey to Africa found ten travelers and myself near Meru, Kenya. Three dusty, bumpy hours of inching along a lonely, rocky road had rendered our bones shaken and our mouths dry. After maneuvering across one more jagged ravine dotted with straggly, thorny bushes, we came to a halt atop an arid, rocky hillside. Nearby, a large, round cinderblock water tank proudly rose against the vast horizon. We were heartily greeted by a few neatly dressed men and about a dozen bare-headed women adorned in multi-colored dresses and elaborate necklaces. They sang us two songs in Swahili as they swayed and clapped in unison. We mingled awhile and talked briefly with those who could communicate in heavily accented English. Hitherto unnoticed, a very black complexioned man announced himself wearing crinkled denim blue pants, leather sandals, a sweat stained red and white striped shirt underneath a dusty, worn, dark blue sport jacket.

Bare-headed with a bent walking stick, he looked like someone had randomly glued rusty wire on his face…. Another neighbor?…Another neighbor…”We had”, he emphatically and boisterously claimed, “been placed in the leather pouch of David’s slingshot by God and hurled over a distant ocean” to land on this particular piece of parched land to stand in front of his gleaming black eyes. He thanked the visitors from Grapevine who had provided funds for them to build a water storage tank and pipeline. He welcomed his curious visitors from a strange town called Salado. His friends and relatives had prayed, and God had answered. He assured us that seven kilometers into the distant spring-fed hills and seven more back to their arid, rugged countryside is a daily trek dutifully made by the women of his community to retrieve water for their families. However, the pipe from the hills to the water tank had been trampled by elephants, and there was no water. He unashamedly and humbly beseeched us for money to repair the pipe and erect an electric wire around the tank so the elephants would not damage it. He confidently stated that his faith would surely see his village through to the day when they could turn the spout from the tank and fill their buckets to the rim with fresh water and in turn fill them with the Holy Spirit and thankfulness for friends so far away who had become partners with them in the name of God. Then he backed away behind his friends and disappeared over a rocky hill… Yeah, he’s our neighbor too.

So, what now?

Rather than being overwhelmed by the immense magnitude of the poor and needy, let us act individually and collectively to care for our neighbors both at home and abroad.

To do that, we have to take an honest look at our own position in society and decide if we are able to leave our comfort zone and truly act on behalf of our neighbors.

It was Martin Luther King Jr. who stated that “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” Technology has made people aware of the cesspools of poverty around the globe. So let us roll up our sleeves and act. Each of us can make a difference in some way. Henry Van Dyke said “Use what talents you possess; the woods would be very silent if no birds sang there except those that sang best.” Let us heed the wisdom of Proverbs 21:13 … “If a man shuts his ears to the cry of the poor, he too will cry out and not be answered.”

Perhaps an old African saying might be appropriate here:

“If you think you are too small to make a difference,try spending the night in a closed room with a mosquito.”

Poverty and its wretched effects on people worldwide will undoubtedly never be completely eradicated. But God is love and hope.

Therefore let us ponder the words of Helen Keller: “Although the world is full of suffering, it is also full of the overcoming of it.”

My hope is that each of us will become more aware of our needy neighbors both near and far. Let us find the courage to reach out to each other in compassionate faith.
















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