The Zone (Taken with Instagram at George Bush International Airport; Houston, Texas)
The Zone (Taken with Instagram at George Bush International Airport; Houston, Texas)
Prelude to adventure
Homeward bound (Taken with Instagram at Red Line to Glenmont)
There are 5,393 carceral facilities in the United States, places where people are held in local jails, state prisons, federal corrections facilities, immigration detention centers – “anywhere where an individual can be sort of confined and locked up,” explains Josh Begley, “and, in some of the bigger instances, warehoused in one place.”
Begley is a master’s student in the Interactive Telecommunications program at New York University. He wanted to graphically represent what all of this means, to communicate not just the sheer quantity of prisons in America (a number that has been booming for decades), but their volume on our landscape. As part of a class project, he created the oddly beautiful website Prison Map, which offers a mashed-up birds-eye view of all of these places, taken from Google Satellite images.
(via The Stunning Geography of Incarceration - Design - The Atlantic Cities)
Happy Birthday, Walt Whitman!
Love the earth and sun and the animals,
despise riches, give alms to everyone that asks,
stand up for the stupid and crazy,
devote your income and labor to others,
hate tyrants, argue not concerning God,
have patience and indulgence toward the people,
take off your hat to nothing known or unknown,
or to any man or number of men,
go freely with powerful uneducated persons,
and with the young, and with the mothers or families,
re-examine all you have been told in school or church or in any book,
and dismiss whatever insults your own soul;
and your very flesh shall be a great poem….
~ Walt Whitman ~
(from the Preface to Leaves of Grass, 1855 edition)
My future home?
There was an old woman who lived in a…
Via Sirolta Ban. October 2011, Hungary.
So much of this embodies my experiences in India. No one, not even elephants, obeys traffic laws…
A mahout crosses a busy road with his elephant in New Delhi, India, May 30, 2012.
[Credit : Manish Swarup/AP]
Young and Old in New Delhi
From this week’s Newsweek International, check out Lana Slezic’s portraits of street children in New Delhi. See the full essay here.
The street kids I photographed in Old Delhi call the place where they live “the park.” Not a strand of grass has the misfortune of growing there. The ground reeks of urine and burning rubbish. Sniffing glue is the center of this world
My life in 5x10 (Taken with instagram)