Showing posts with label The Photographer - Others. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Photographer - Others. Show all posts

I Recommend... Undesired

In India, all women must confront the cultural pressure to bear a son. The consequences of this preference is a disregard for the lives of women and girls. From birth until death they face a constant threat of violence. See the project at http://mediastorm.com/publication/undesired


Walter Astrada's Undesired shows us a shocking side of India, where women are marginalised to the point that a daughter is fed less than her brother and deprived of the basic education he receives, girls are forced into manual labour at the age of 8 just for the hope of being able to afford to pay the family of her future husband for the privilege of marrying him, and in the case of a failure to pay up the required amount, women are burned alive and killed without a second thought. In fact, this last part is done so happily, because it means the family can receive even more money when he remarries.

I don't believe in judging cultures I have not personally experienced (and let's be frank: mistreatment of a race or gender is not unique, unfortunately), because there are undoubtedly things that we do not see unless we're living in the midst of what we're judging, but the fact that this is India is what jumps out at me. This is an emerging country with a rich history and culture, massive power in its region, and one of the world's fastest-growing economies (8th according to the CIA), yet it hides this revolting character trait.

The lesson here is that even the best of us are not saints, and no matter where you are as a country or culture, there are still things that need fixing and people that need your help.

I'm not posting this for you to judge, but so you can understand what our fellow humans are going through in another part of the world. Thankfully, the Indian government sees the injustice being committed against women here and is trying to do something about it.

Links: Bring Back the Big Orange

Yes, it looks awesome. From Daylife.
Andrew Mason of MaxDenver makes a case for returning to orange as the Broncos' primary colour. I completely agree with his thoughts; not only does the orange look better than the navy blue, but it only truly feels like the Denver Broncos when you see that bright orange.

Links: Macro Photography on a Budget

Photocritic.org has an excellent article on how to make your own macro lens for an SLR camera. It's quite old news, being originally published in 2005 (although it did appear in a 2009 issue of Make), but I think it's something worth sharing for anyone that wants to dabble in the photography of the minuscule without having to skimp on their rent for two months. Check it out!

Thanks: http://psdcollector.blogspot.com/

A Distinctly Less Humourous Pictures Post

(Easter Island, Pt. 1) Anakena beach, Easter Island.
I've only recently taken an interest, but the history of Easter Island (known in the local language as Rapa Nui) is fascinating. This is a telling picture because it shows two things: Moai statues and what we can barely call a palm tree forest (note the landscape beyond those trees).
Easter Island was once covered with vast palm forests. However, in the pursuit of their religious duties, the building of the Moai statues you see here, they failed to keep their destruction of the forests in check. This culminated in famine and death, and a brutal civil war over the limited resources.

A raccoon shares some food with a skunk.

I love this picture.

Joseph Kittinger's jump.
Ah, now, this one... I said I loved the skunk and raccoon picture, but the Supreme Awesomeness of watching Joseph Kittinger jump from 31,300 metres (102,800 feet) high is mind-bending. The sight and sound of that moment, captured when he leaped from his balloon in the shot above, is something the introspective recluse in me can only dream of experiencing; Kittinger literally looked over at the giant world that gave him life, and down at the enormous clouds that gave him water to drink, and up there, without air and wind, the only thing he heard was the sound of his breathing. There wasn't a rush of noise against his ears, no force pushing the ripples of his suit, just pure silence. Nothing. Again, I can only dream what he lived... the few seconds where cars didn't crack your cheekbone, where planes didn't rummage through your eardrums, where the voices of hatred didn't pound against your cranium.
Just sweet, unadulterated bliss. Floating down to Earth at 614 mph, for four minutes and thirty-six minutes, with only sweet silence to keep you company. Wow.

Mother and baby rat.
From my now ill-fated mouse-researching days.

Blackhole.
This picture has two significant points, one is that it shows the existence of a blackhole. Those bright dots you see are stars, their movement is being affected by an invisible force. Contrary to popular belief, blackholes don't necessarily swallow up everything they encounter, it's possible for stars (and other objects) to orbit the blackhole for an indefinite period of time.
The second is that the stars and blackhole you're looking at are those in the center of our galaxy.

(Easter Island, Pt. 2) Motu Nui and the Bird-man cult.
The Tangata manu religion replaced the Moai religion, and was eventually killed off by Christianity.
Motu Nui, the largest islet seen in that picture, was an integral part of the religion. In a contest to acquire the rights to all the islets' food for a year, islanders would swim through shark-infested waters to Motu Nui and wait for the first egg to be laid, they would then race to get that first egg, swim back to the main island, and climb to the clifftop village of Orongo, where the winner would be declared. Many contestants died each year, either through the sharks, drowning, or falling off the cliffs of Rano Kau during their ascent (and possibly even by each others' hands); and many times the winners would pillage the islets' resources without realising they were damaging their delicate ecosystems. Just like the Moai religion, this militant cult senselessly ignored its effects on Easter Island, and led to another civil war which, along with diseases brought by Peruvian slave raiders, reduced the island's population to critical numbers. (Ironically, at this point, the entire island had converted to Roman Catholicism.)
To be completely honest, the Rapanui were incredibly smart people. Despite their short-sightedness and the conscious destruction of their entire civilisation, they managed some amazing feats building their massive statues and transporting them across the entire island. And their near-extinction can also be attributed to foreign slave-traders, who abducted and killed 1500 islanders, and one piece of shit fucktard named Jean-Baptiste Dutrou-Bornier, whose goal for Easter Island was to rid it of its inhabitants and convert it into a sheep farm.
In the end, though, this isolated piece of land in the Pacific Ocean still serves as an umblemished mirror for every one of us. Self-destruction is never as difficult as you may think.

Thank you.