First books, now this. Well, yes, I am giving away Apple video iPods. Find out how and why, here. No, this isn't a joke or a prank. It's for real.
Tiffinbooks Offer: Thrity Umrigar’s The Space Between Us
I have received 7 copies of “The Space Between Us , a novel by Thrity Umrigar.
I am giving them all away here, one a week for the next seven weeks. Here is how you can win a copy. Go to my wedding photojournalism blog – bliss – and subscribe to it. Once you are signed on through Feedblitz, send me an email at tiffinbox [at] pipalproductions [dot] com, with your name, address and telephone number. If you really want this book, all of that information should be real. Entries without all of the required information will be tossed out. The subject line of your email should be ”Tiffinbooks Offer: Thrity Umrigar's The Space Between Us.“
I will be checking for sure if you have signed on with bliss. You are welcome to unsubscribe to that feed whenever you wish, but I hope you will continue receiving updates from that blog as well.
At the end of each week, typically on a Thursday, I'll randomly choose one winner among those who signed up. I'll post the name (and nothing else) of the winner here each week. Please do not send me an email asking if you won. If I have an email address, but no email from you, I can't send you the book.
Good luck and welcome to bliss.
Links for January 18, 2006
Post A Secret is an interesting art project that can be both funny and scary. What secrets will you share with the world (anonymously, of course)?
Inaya Art: “Inaya Art is a platform for photographers to display and sell their creative work. Our primary objective is to promote photography as a form of art.” [via Siddharth Siva]
Samantha Appleton and Marshall Clarke both have photographed in South Asia [via Melissa Lyttle]
A roundup of Andrew Kantor‘s photographer's rights [via A Photo A Day]
New California Media has changed its name to New America Media. Under the banner of NCM, however, it recently held its 7th annual awards banquet. There are several notable winners with a South Asia connection – Lisa Tsering, Lavina Melwani, Krishna Kumar, Bushra Rehman, Sadhanand Dhume and Ragini Srinivasan. Congratulations. The ethnic press has arrived.
Links for January 16, 2006
Joe Buissink is a wedding photographer whose work I admire and respect. Check out his website. It's not the usual masala.
What ever you choose to do, choose one thing and do it well. That was sound advice from my folks and Jim Zuckerman seems to be echoing it as well here, referring to the choices we make when we photograph.
No sex please, you are an Indian woman
Neeraja is a lawyer and writer
Another terrific wedding photographer, Neil van Niekerk, is also a teacher whom I greatly admire and respect. I think he is so good that I once enquired whether he was planning on writing a book. We won't have to wait that long because his online tutorials are available now and are a God-send. This one about using your on-board flash is to the point and helpful. Check out his web site. If you are a Nikon user, do yourself a huge favor and bookmark Neil's pages about a plethora of Nikon cameras and accessories. And if you get anything out of these tutorials, please consider supporting Neal's work by making a donation.
*bliss has an updated banner image. Take a look!
Shobha At Contrasto
Clemente Bernad wrote in yesterday to tell me that he had updated his website and that he was being represented by Contrasto, the Italian photo agency. Skimming through the names of the other photographers at Contrasto, I came upon Shobha‘s name.
Shobha's biography is impressive, though I have to confess I haven't come across her work here in the US. That's rather typical, though, as most media outlets in the US are hard pressed to look beyond their own Atlantic coast for the talent that lies beyond. She was born in Palermo and appears to mostly work out of Italy.
If anyone reading this has any contact information for Shobha, please email me at tiffinbox [at] pipalproductiions [dot] com. I would love to introduce her to Tiffinbox and of course the SAJA Photoforum.
Links for January 15, 2006
Mark Glaser formerly at Online Journalism Review is starting a new blog for PBS called MediaShift. It launches on January 18, 2006. I'll have it bookmarked for sure as I really enjoyed Glaser's writing on OJR.
Photonotes [via Cory Doctorow at Boing Boing] is a terrific online resource which promises to answer the HOW and WHY's of photography. Also check out the popular PhotoNotes Dictionary of Film and Digital Photography.
Visual Complexity: “The project's main goal is to leverage a critical understanding of different visualization methods, across a series of disciplines, as diverse as Biology, Social Networks or the World Wide Web.” More than eye candy, it promotes interesting way to present your data. [via JD on TBD]
The Online Photographer reports that Nikon is slashing all its film camera research, sales and production. Long live digital. Finally, Nikon has run out of excuses to really do battle with Canon.
National Wildlife Federation's 35th Annual Photography Contest winners are now published. Hira Punjabi's image of two male blackbucks fighting for territorial rights is simply beautiful. The image is so evocative that I can smell the dust that the animals are kicking up.
after the wave, an Oxfam/UK photo exhibit about the 2004 tsunami to hit South and South East Asia is now at the National Theatre in London. [via Shutterseek]
Top Knots, the annual photo contest for wedding photographers hosted by Photo District News has extended its deadline to February 24, 2006. Applications and more information can be found here. Check out the competition, here are the 2004 and 2005 winners.
Snaps Magazine is accepting submissions for its next themed issue, their 10th – Young Ones. Deadline is February 15, 2006. Winning is simply having your work published and seen by people from around the world.
JPG Magazine‘s next theme is Photography Is Not A Crime. Today was the deadline. Will wait and see what these images look like. Here are the past four issues of JPG: Issue 1, Issue 2, Issue 3 and Issue 4.
This is as much a dislosure as a request. I recently joined the Six Apart Affiliate Program. If you are thinking of starting a blog, allow me to recommend TypePad. That's what I have been using for the last year and a half for this and other blog sites I publish. For every trial-susbscriber who signs up, I receive $3. It's a win-win situation. So, give it a shot.
The Brown Frown Argument
“If you are brown, them authorities will frown.”
That's my synthesis of what goes on in America if you are a non-white photographer taking pictures on the street. I am not the only one who has been bullied for merely walking on the street with a couple of camera bodies. Harikrishna has had at least a couple of incidents. And apparently so has the documentary film maker Rakesh Sharma who is taking New York city to court over his [legal] run-in with the law. If you are as pissed off as I am, please sign the petition.
Tiffinbooks, January: The Space Between Us by Thrity Umrigar
A journalist for seventeen years, Thrity Umrigar has written for the Washington Post, the Plain Dealer, and other national newspapers, andcontributes regularly to the Boston Globe's book pages. She teaches creative writing and literature at Case Western Reserve University. The author of the novel Bombay Time and the memoir First Darling of the Morning: Selected Memories of an Indian Childhood, she was a winner of the Nieman Fellowship to Harvard University. She has a Ph.D. in English and lives in Cleveland, Ohio.
{A Conversation With Thrity Umrigar}
Tell us a little bit about your growing up years.
Well, I was born in Bombay and lived there until I was 21, when I came to the U.S. I was raised in a joint family, which meant I grew up around very loving aunts and uncles. And since I was an only child, it helped to have all those extra adults in my life, for love and guidance. I've always had many sets of parents and even today, have a knack for “adopting” parents.
What do you remember most about growing up in Bombay?
I have two overriding childhood memories or impressions: One, was always being excruciating aware of the poverty around me. Now, as a middle-class kid, you're not supposed to be that aware of–or certainly not supposed to be tortured by–the poverty around you. It's a defense mechanism of sorts, to be able to ignore it. For whatever reason, I was never able to ignore it and to some extent, it really affected my childhood, made me a hypersensitive child.
Two, I always wrote. Writing was my way to make sense of the world outside and inside my home. Despite the recollections of the adults in my life, I don't think I was a terribly articulate child. Writing was a way to give wings to the inchoate emotions and feelings inside of me.
When did you know you were a writer?
Well, I was writing poems at a very young age. As a child, I would write ‘anonymous' poems to my parents whenever I felt wronged by them and then secretly pin them on their closet door. So I learned early on that writing was a good way to get rid of pent-up feelings.
All through my teen years I wrote poetry and short stories and essays. I think I knew I was a writer–not that I was necessarily a good writer, just that I was a writer–one evening when I was 14 or so. I remember sitting in my living room and writing this long poem called The Old Man that came out of me as if someone was dictating it. It was a terribly sappy poem but I felt compelled to write it and when I was done, I was exhausted but I knew something about myself that I didn't before.
Why did you decide to come to the U.S.?
I've never had an easy answer to that question. In some sense, my whole life prepared me for moving to the U.S. I was a product of an educational system that was very colonial and very Western in its orientation. I still remember my fourth-grade composition teacher telling the class not to create characters who were blond and blue-eyed.
Her statement came as a shock because that was all we knew, you know?
When I was a child, I read everything ever written by the British children's writer Enid Blyton and later, the Billy Bunter and William series of novels. And as I got older, all I was reading was Western literature. American pop culture was a big influence, also. I mean, until I picked up Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children, I had hardly ever read a novel by an Indian writer. Rushdie was a revelation for me. So that's the “sociological” answer. But of course, there were also a hundred personal reasons–wanting to travel, wanting an adventure, wanting to be independent, wanting to get away from certain aspects of my life, not knowing what the heck to do with myself after I'd finished college. I remember the day when it occurred to me very clearly that if I lived in India, I would never be totally independent and would never discover who exactly I was as a person. I wanted to live in a place where I would rise or fall based on my own efforts and talents. And I was very lucky to have a father, who, despite his immense sadness at having me so far away from home, always encouraged me to reach for my dreams and never held me back. . . But I'm not even sure it was this complicated. Remember, I was 21. Weird as it may sound, not much thought went into it.
So you came to Ohio State? Why Ohio State?
Well, that's a funny story. It's indicative of how so many major decisions in my life have been made. I was sitting in my living room in Bombay, checking off a list of American universities that offered a M.A. in journalism, when my eyes fell on “Ohio State University.” There was a Joan Baez record playing on the turntable and right then, her song, Banks of the Ohio, came on. I looked up and thought, “It's a sign.”
Hmmm. Well, I hope the experience there was worth it.
Oh, OSU was a blast. Two of the happiest years of my life. Within days of being there, I made friendships that have lasted till today. Those two years taught me that one can make new families at any point in one's life. I had such positive experiences there that it made me want to live in the U.S. forever. That one line in Bombay Time, where Jimmy Kanga feels like he loved Oxford so much he felt he could've gone to war for it, that's what it used to feel like to me. I'll always be grateful.
After OSU, I worked for two years at the Lorain Journal, a small but feisty little paper near Cleveland. It was a grueling experience, long hours, all that, but when I left there, I knew I could tackle anything that daily journalism threw my way.
So you came to the Akron Beacon Journal when?
In 1987. The Beacon had the reputation of being a real writer's paper and had just won yet another Pulitzer. It was a great paper to work at. Still is.
Who are your favorite authors?
I draw inspiration from everywhere. I'm one of those people who even reads cereal boxes. But my favorite authors are Salman Rushdie (I recently re-read Midnight's Children and wept in awe and gratitude), Toni Morrison and Jamaica Kincaid. But influence is a hard thing to account for–I think Bob Dylan and Emily Dickinson have probably influenced my writing–in terms of making me crazy about words–as much as anybody.
THE SPACE BETWEEN US by Thrity Umrigar
Publication Date: January 10, 2006
Price: $24.95
William Morrow/An Imprint of HarperCollins Publishers
Belated
Yes, I have been slow to arrive at my machine for the last couple of days. But here is wishing you all a very happy and prosperous new year!
Winners Of The Macworld Subscription
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