---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 8:17 PM
Subject: [Intheloop@tacticaltech] Tactical Tech's new book: want to
contribute?
To: [email protected]


We're always getting great ideas from people we meet, who are passionate
about info-activism, so we'd like to ask you to contribute to the
research for our new book!

Our interest and work on evidence based campaigning and the use of data
and visualisation in advocacy has led us to develop a book about the use
of evidence and visual arts to move, influence and persuade people on
particular issues. We're tracing the history of these techniques in the
activist movement and the growing adoption of them today.

We've all seen events of the past century made significant through
iconic images: the visual that epitomises the moment, tells the
back-story or reveals something that will not, or cannot, be
articulated. For example, the 1972 photograph of Phan Thi Kim Phuc, a
Vietnamese girl running naked, arms outstretched, burned by a napalm
attack became emblematic of the Vietnam war. The present day
environmental justice movement may credit two important infographics to
its evolution: satellite images of the depletion of the ozone layer
above Antartica, and the simple infographic explaining the Greenhouse
Effect. There are also plenty of lesser known visuals which are
momentous and significant even if they don't make it on to the frontpage
of every newspaper worldwide. Take the Shrinking Map of Palestine,
<http://www.normanfinkelstein.com/truth-in-mapping/>a simple and
powerful map presenting the grave realities of the Palestine-Israel
conflict. Visuals like these can slip through the cracks, got lost in
translation or be easily forgotten in a constantly changing, information
loaded environment.

Can you think of a visual image (map, design, drawing, painting,
photograph) which tells a story that hasn't been heard? In your country
or community, what visual is iconic of a key political moment? We're
writing a book
<http://www.tacticaltech.org/reveal/news/reveal/news/visbook> about the
coming together of evidence and the visual arts in activism, and right
now we're crowdsourcing stories about political transition or change for
a community where a particular visual representation was extremely
important. We have been able to find many examples from Central and
Western Europe and North America but want to find more from other parts
of the world.

*What we're looking for:*Lesser known visuals which have been socially
and politically significant for communities and societies throughout
Africa, Asia and Latin America. This includes photos, maps, charts,
televised clips, raw video footage, posters, political graphics,
infographics, data sheets or tables and even propaganda imagery. * *

*What we're not looking for:* Images of much-discussed events from the
Western world in the past few decades, like the collapse of the World
Trade Centre Towers in 2001 or the image of a bombed London bus; images
from Central Europe and North America.

Depending on your preferred channel you can email Maya
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>, tweet us at
@info_activism <http://twitter.com/info_activism> or share a link on
Facebook <http://facebook.com/Tactical.Tech>. Tell us what you remember
about that visual and why, and why it was significant at the time.

We'll definitely credit you for contributing (the print will be visible! ;)

Thanks!
--
Outreach and Communications Coordinator http://www.tacticaltech.org/
http://www.twitter.com/Info_Activism
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