Sunday, September 22, 2013

Blogs Resources


"Which social networking sites are you using?"
Survey from Online Journalism Review

Cyberjournalist.net
Bloggers code of ethics


Denver Post
Blogs on the Denver Post Web site


Facebook
Facebook social networking site


Flickr
Flickr photo sharing site


Hill and Knowlton
Collective conversation blogs





Legal guide for bloggers
Guide from the Electronic Frontier Foundation
Media Bloggers Association
News and information from media bloggers
Myspace
Myspace social networking site
OhmyNews International
OhmyNews citizen journalism site
Spokesman Review
Spokesman Review site
Technorati: Front Page
Technorati search engine for blogs
The 11 layers of citizen journalism
Article from Poynter Institute about citizen journalism
Use of the Internet by America's Newspapers
Study by the Bivings Group


Thursday, August 19, 2010

Blog Entry dated 8/19/2010 4:38 PM

Research paper

Abstract:

This paper analyses how folk creativity finds expression
in the context of village festival ambience by blurring many
genres. This paper also describes how framing devices of the
blurred genres are used to transport the audience between fiction,
ritual and reality. One of the most recognizable framing devices
of Therukoothu is the endless repetitive descriptions of Draupadi’s
humiliation in the Kaurava court as exemplified by the text and
performance of Kuravanchi.

Therukoothu1 as the theatre of Mahabharata occupies the psyche and the landscape of the villagers of northern Tamil Nadu during the summer months. Mahabharata, the great epic of the Bharata2 Dynasty and Ramayana are two Sanskrit Indian epics valued for centuries for their high literary merit, religious inspiration and teaching morals for everyday life. The Mahabharata was composed around 300 BC and received numerous additions until about 300 AD. It is divided into 18 cantos containing altogether about 200,000 lines of verse interspersed with short prose passages. The central
theme of Mahabharata is sibling rivalry and fratricide between Pandavas and Kauravas over the kingdom of Hasthinapura. The conflict begins when Drtharashtra, the eldest son of the Kuru dynasty has to pass over his crown to his younger brother Pandu because of his physical blindness. After reigning for a brief period Pandu renounces his kingdom due to his incurable illness and goes to forest with his two wives Kunti and Madhuri. The five sons of Pandu, the Pandava brothers (Dharmaraja3, Bhima, Arjuna, Nakula,

The tīmiti (fire walking) participants of the Mahābhārata festival use the words “āvēcam” and “aru ” to describe the ḷ experiences of people who get possessed. The Tamil words for trance, “āvēcam” and “aruḷ” are indicative of the emotional states men and women achieve prior to, during, and after fire walking rituals of Mahābhārata festival in Tiraupati1 Ammaṉ temples of Tamil

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Saturday, December 22, 2007

storage device

Jobo Giga one ultra Mon, 15 Oct

Jobo today announced its latest portable storage device - The GIGA
one ultra - promising doubled transfer speeds compared to the
previous GIGA one. This means up to 5.47 MB per second or 1GB in
around three minutes. The new device will be available in four
capacities ranging from 40 GB to a whopping 200 GB with US...

http://www.dpreview.com/news/0710/07101501jobogigaoneultra.asp