Posts tagged education

If you want to do something sharp and innovative, you have to know what went on before. Museums are custodians of epiphanies, and these epiphanies enter the central nervous system and deep recesses of the mind.

George Lois on inspiration. 

Also see the legendary adman on creativity and ideas as the product of discovery, not invention

(via explore-blog)

Couldn’t help but re-blog this! I try to keep my tumblr to my photos only but this was worth sharing!

From one of my new favorite tumblr blogs, which is another Maria Popova project - Explore Blog! Check out this wonderful animated video. For those of you that follow my tumblr, you know I try to publish original content as much as I possibly can (mostly photo essays of events and quick observations) BUT some content begs to be seen and re-blogged. Please check out this video AND the Explore tumblr!

explore-blog:

TED curator Chris Anderson shares some fascinating questions with still-unknown answers, animated by Andrew Park of RSA Animate fame.

I.Love.Dave.Chappelle.

Since I’m on sharing my reading list. How apropos is it that I see this blogged on tumblr!! Absolutely WORTH the reblog! 
tobeshelved:

Banned books return to shelves in Egypt and Tunisia | Books | guardian.co.uk

A number of highly political titles censored by the regime of ousted Tunisian president Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali are now returning to the country’s bookshop shelves.
La Regente de Carthage by Nicolas Beau and Catherine Graciet, a critical book about the former president’s family, focusing in particular on the role of his wife, Leila, is among those now openly on sale in the country, according to the International Publishers Association.
Alongside it is a previously banned study of the long-serving Tunisian president from whom Ben Ali took over following a 1987 coup: Habib Bourguiba: La Trace et l’Heritage by Michel Camau and Vincent Geisser.
Also now appearing in the country’s bookshops are The Assassination of Salah Ben Youssef by Omar Khlifi, a book about the shooting of a former Tunisian minister of justice in Frankfurt in 1961, and works by journalist Toaufik Ben Brik, a prominent critic of Ben Ali’s presidency.
Alexis Krikorian, director of the Freedom to Publish programme at the IPA, said the emergence of these and other formerly banned books within Tunisia was “very good news”. Whether censorship still existed with regard to new titles was a separate issue, he added, but it was likely that the legal submission procedure, which under the old regime had been misused to block books at their printers, “no longer applies”.
Anecdotal reports are also emerging of once suppressed titles appearing for impromptu sale on street corners and newspaper kiosks across Egypt. Salwa Gaspard of joint English/Arabic language publisher Saqi Books said accounts in the Arabic press told of books that had been hidden for years in private basements now once more seeing the light of day.
Cairo is also to hold a book fair in Tahrir Square – the focus for protests against former president Hosni Mubarak – at the end of March, according to Trevor Naylor of the American University of Cairo Press bookshop, which is based in the square. Naylor told the Bookseller that the event had been planned in the wake of the cancelled Cairo Book Fair, which was abandoned in January in the face of growing political unrest.
“Everyone around the globe now associates Tahrir Square with freedom and revolution,” Naylor said. “We really wanted to do something that celebrates what happened here, and this seems like a great way to do it.”

Since I’m on sharing my reading list. How apropos is it that I see this blogged on tumblr!! Absolutely WORTH the reblog! 

tobeshelved:

Banned books return to shelves in Egypt and Tunisia | Books | guardian.co.uk

A number of highly political titles censored by the regime of ousted Tunisian president Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali are now returning to the country’s bookshop shelves.

La Regente de Carthage by Nicolas Beau and Catherine Graciet, a critical book about the former president’s family, focusing in particular on the role of his wife, Leila, is among those now openly on sale in the country, according to the International Publishers Association.

Alongside it is a previously banned study of the long-serving Tunisian president from whom Ben Ali took over following a 1987 coup: Habib Bourguiba: La Trace et l’Heritage by Michel Camau and Vincent Geisser.

Also now appearing in the country’s bookshops are The Assassination of Salah Ben Youssef by Omar Khlifi, a book about the shooting of a former Tunisian minister of justice in Frankfurt in 1961, and works by journalist Toaufik Ben Brik, a prominent critic of Ben Ali’s presidency.

Alexis Krikorian, director of the Freedom to Publish programme at the IPA, said the emergence of these and other formerly banned books within Tunisia was “very good news”. Whether censorship still existed with regard to new titles was a separate issue, he added, but it was likely that the legal submission procedure, which under the old regime had been misused to block books at their printers, “no longer applies”.

Anecdotal reports are also emerging of once suppressed titles appearing for impromptu sale on street corners and newspaper kiosks across Egypt. Salwa Gaspard of joint English/Arabic language publisher Saqi Books said accounts in the Arabic press told of books that had been hidden for years in private basements now once more seeing the light of day.

Cairo is also to hold a book fair in Tahrir Square – the focus for protests against former president Hosni Mubarak – at the end of March, according to Trevor Naylor of the American University of Cairo Press bookshop, which is based in the square. Naylor told the Bookseller that the event had been planned in the wake of the cancelled Cairo Book Fair, which was abandoned in January in the face of growing political unrest.

“Everyone around the globe now associates Tahrir Square with freedom and revolution,” Naylor said. “We really wanted to do something that celebrates what happened here, and this seems like a great way to do it.”

Books I NEED to read this year…

  • Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother by Amy Chua
  • Metaphors We Live By by George Lakoff
  • The Girl on the Fridge by Etgar Keret
  • The American Way of Death (Revisited) by Jessica Mitford
  • Still Life with Woodpecker by Tom Robbins
  • My Stroke of Insight: A Brain Scientist’s Personal Journey by Jill Taylor
  • The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay by Michael Chabon
  • Illustrado: A Novel by Miguel Syjuco
  • Communicating Vessels by Andre Breton
  • Geek Love by Katherine Dunn
  • The Russian Debutante’s Handbook by Gary Shteyngart
  • Decoded by Jay-Z
  • The $12 Million Stuffed Shark: The Curious Economics of Contemporary Art by Don Thompson
  • Who’s Irish?: Stories by Gish Jen
  • Imelda, Steel Butterfly of the Philippines by Katherine Ellison

We’ll see how I do this year. This is not an exhaustive list, obviously, but hoping I can read, at the very least, half of what’s on here.