Please check out Prashant Panjiar's photo essay on TIME's website about a Florida man who travelled to New Delhi to have an expensive heart operation for fraction of the cost it would have cost him. This says a lot about how far medicine in India has come and how other organizations with exemplary track records can also help other desperate patients in the West.
Links for May 25, 2006
Rent Glass, no not the kind you drink out of but the kind you use to make images: Lenses. Now you can rent a lens you really wanted to buy.
This is where I want to be in October. If you are at all on the brink of advancing your career as a digital photographer, join me. No Kevin did not pay me to plug his workshop, but I heard him speak in Las Vegas and I gotta say, he knows his &^(#. Also check out his Photoshop Actions that transform ordinary looking images into something quite exquisite. His most recent Sloppy Borders CD is my favorite.
National Geographic’s “Your Shot”
“Take your best shot—and send it to us,” asks The National Geographic for Your Shot, a monthly feature that will showcase the first 5000 images submitted by its readers.
Karen Nakamura of Photoethnography.com thinks it is an ongoing scam.
What do you make of it?
Coming Full Circle: Call For Submission
Full Circle is currently accepting submissions between 1000-3000 words in length by people of Indian origin who have spent a significant amount of time working on a service project in India. We are looking for well-written, vivid, true, inspirational personal stories and essays. While the stories need not be about service specifically, we are seeking submissions that reflect the experiences had, the friendships formed and the realizations made while engaging in service work in India. Some themes to consider might be identity, people, places, turning points and challenging moments.
Submissions should be e-mailed to Sindya Bhanoo. Please include the following information:
* Full name
* Nationality
* Contact information
* Description and length of the project you worked on in India
Submissions Due By: July 15, 2006.
More about the project: Every year, young people of Indian origin travel to India to pursue social service. They settle in cities and stay in villages, work with children and adults, and learn and teach. They make this trip to India not to visit, but to live in and experience the country for what it really is. While India is not their home, it is their homeland. They are in search of their roots. They want to give back and make a difference. They want to inspire and be inspired. Some stay for a few months, others for years. Some work on education and health initiatives, others work with tribes trying to market traditional art, and still others devote themselves to improving agricultural practices.
Over the years, the pull to return to the homeland has been running stronger and deeper. More and more youth journey to India every year. Long after they complete their work in India, the stories and memories of the people whose lives they touched, and who touched their lives, stay with them. Their stories are filled with appreciation and wonder, laughter and tears, and challenges and aspirations. Above all, their stories resonate with hopes and dreams for India, themselves, and humanity.
Full Circle is a collection of these stories. For more information and a sample submission, visit us at: http://fullcircle.indicorps.org.
Links for May 23, 2006
The first no rules street photography site on the web
Bending Light Magazine, Issue2: a terrific site that presents photographs beautifully. Last mentioned this site here.
Photojournalism as Activism, a conversation with photojournalist Lynn Johnson. Johnson is also responsible for a new project called Xenophoto, a website “about neutralizing fear based on difference.”
A White House Photo Op in real time [thanks to Melissa Lyttle for the link]
Strobist: Learning to use your small flashes better
Build your own paper pinhole camera
Into The Heart Of Unrest: Photojournalist Tomas Van Houtryve reports from Nepal
Ami Vitale on Blueeyes Magazine, Issue 11
Neeraja Viswanathan, soon to be a Siren, is guest blogging at Sepia Mutiny
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