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- From: Marianne Dugan <beaver.cs.washington.edu!gnosys!OREGON.UOREGON.EDU!MDUGAN>
- Subject: Re: Northern Exposure
- Message-ID: <01GT0430FIJQ8Y5IUW@OREGON.UOREGON.EDU>
- Date: Fri, 1 Jan 1993 19:37:35 GMT
- Lines: 44
-
- Original-Sender: Marianne Dugan <OREGON.UOREGON.EDU!MDUGAN>
-
- Peshewegunzh wrote:
- >
- >When one walks through the forest, one is surrounded by spirit on all sides.
- >A TV program about the forest, however, will have none of the spirit
- >present, only a series of unliving still photographic images technologically
- >sequenced.
-
- This is certainly true. But consider this example: There is a
- man who lives on a mountain in Southern Oregon that is constantly
- being threatened with clear-cutting, and the man (along with many
- other people) have for years worked to block the cuts (lying in
- the road in front of trucks, etc.) The man took some amazing
- slides of the area, and some aerial photographs showing the
- terrible destruction of the forests, and began giving his slide
- show, with a very stirring and heartfelt talk about his home. He
- brought the slide show to Washington and convinced many senators
- to see his slide show. And it had a profound influence on the
- people who saw it. No, it did not capture the spirit of the
- mountain, but his awesome photographs along with his powerful
- talk combined to bring the spirit of the forest into the room
- where he gave his talks (I saw the slide show myself), where his
- speech alone would not be so powerful to many people. The
- visual, as you have noted, is very powerful and is mostly used to
- bad ends in television. But I think its power is not
- intrinsically evil and I think that television is but an
- extension (albeit probably more prone to misuse) of the other
- visual media. I am thinking of another moving visual experience
- which I first saw on t.v. -- "Rage Over Trees" -- with similar
- visual shocks and wonders as Lou Gold's slide show -- about one
- of the last virgin old-growth areas in the Northwest, Opal Creek.
- The program had a great effect on people and helped to stop the
- clearcutting in Opal Creek and finally led the owner to sell the
- land to the Nature Conservancy.
-
- In sum -- I do believe visual media _can_ convey _some_ of the
- spirit of a forest -- enough to bring tears to the eyes and get
- people off their butts and into action to care enough about it to
- save it.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- Marianne Dugan mdugan@oregon.uoregon.edu
-
-