#4 Copenhagen, Denmark: Great Bicycle City Photo Tour
Written by Zachary Shahan
Published on November 11th, 2009‘).insertBefore(‘.post > .entry’); digg_related({domain:”ecoworldly.com”,container:”#digg-related”,width:”",height:”",endPoint:”stories/upcoming”}); } //–>
Home of the upcoming climate change conference, Copenhagen is #4 in this great bicycle city photo tour series. With about 55% of trips being by bicycle, Copenhagen is an amazing place to visit or live if you like bicycling.
The photos to follow give you a taste of this great bicycle city. From dogs on bikes to bikes on bikes, from bikes in ice to bike counters, enjoy these great bicycle photos.
- » See also: #5 Paris, France: Great Bicycle City Photo Tour
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The Greater Copenhagen area has about 500,000 people bicycling everyday. Approximately 55% of all trips and 37% of commuter trips (to work or school) are by bicycle. This city has to be an option when choosing the best bicycle city in the world. You can get a feel for the atmosphere of this city from the photos below, but to really experience it, maybe visit the city and promote a strong international commitment to address climate change at the upcoming climate conference in December!
If you missed the previous bicycle photo tours, they were #5 Paris (France), #6 Groningen (the Netherlands), #7 Berlin (Germany), #8 Barcelona (Spain), #9 Bogota (Columbia), and #10 Basel (Switzerland).
For a review of some of the environmental reasons why this bicycle photo tour is on EcoWorldly (as well as some health and wellness reasons), read the intro to the Barcelona bicycle city photo tour.
When I see an adult on a bicycle, I do not despair for the future of the human race. ~H.G. Wells
Image Credit 1: Negu. | Alberto Rey via flickr under a Creative Commons license
Image Credit 2: Guille. via flickr under a Creative Commons license
Image Credit 3: mobil’homme via flickr under a Creative Commons license
Image Credit 4: elsamu via flickr under a Creative Commons license
Image Credit 5: Coolville via Wikimedia Commons under a Creative Commons license
Image Credit 6: DavidDennisPhotos.com via flickr under a Creative Commons licensehttp://digg.com/u1GAdF” title=”Post to Twitter (http://digg.com/u1GAdF)” style=”">Tweet This Post
Tags: bicycle, bicycles, bicycling, bike, bikes, biking, Climate Change, Copenhagen, denmark, photo, photo tour, photography, photos, tour, Transportationtag. * * If you do not want to deal with the intricities of the noscript * section, delete the tag (from … to ). On * average, the noscript tag is called from less than 1% of internet * users. */–>![]()
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Source: Transworld Ride BMX» | Transworld BMXAuthor: FatTonyCheck here for a full list of all the national BMX races in the ABA and NBL for 2010.
Hummm…..
Andre Bauer is quite pissed off that a judge ruled the “I Believe” license plates were unconstitutional.
For those who say proclaiming “I believe” violates the constitution by giving preference to Christianity, I think this lawsuit clearly discriminates against persons of faith. I will ask the state Attorney General to vigorously appeal this ruling because it is time that people stand up for their beliefs. Enough is enough.
This is absurd. As Sandhya Bathija of Americans United writes, “This lawsuit actually prevents discrimination against persons of faith, and that’s more than evident.”
Bauer goes on:
I could say that this is yet another example of judicial activism, of federal judges out of control. My instincts tell me that it’s even deeper than that. I think it’s another attack on Christianity and I’m not going to sit by and watch this one happen.
Someone should tell Bauer that two of the plaintiffs, Rev. Tom Summers and Rev. Monty Knight, are Christians…
In fact, here’s what Summers said about the case:
“I received some emails that asked how I, as a Christian minister, could be involved with this,” Summers said.
“But what I told them is that it is very Christian to be involved in a matter like this,” Summers continued. “One of the core values of Christianity is equality and fairness. This case is wrapped up on a human level on the issue of fairness. For a license plate to be displayed that is government sanctioned only for one faith group, it makes other faith groups in our state feel very isolated.”
What does Bauer say about this again?
… I think it’s another attack on Christianity and I’m not going to sit by and watch this one happen.
Right.
One more excerpt from Bauer:
I am proud and unrelenting in my support of the Legislature’s unanimous enactment of this plate.
Why? Because the “I believe” plate reflects core values that are meaningful to our society, promoting love, joy, and comfort in our spiritual lives, and accommodating to every citizen’s right of free exercise of any and all religionsAll religions? Then why is there a Christian cross on the plate? And what about people of no faith?
Bauer doesn’t care. He doesn’t get the notion that there are people who don’t subscribe to Christianity and some of us who find Christian beliefs offensive.
Separation of church and state benefits everybody. There’s no need for the state to issue this license plate. The judge made the right decision and Bauer doesn’t know what he’s talking about.
The Lt. Gov. also mentions he doesn’t like how the judge awarded AU and another group their rightful attorneys’ fees. Bathija has a suggestion for him:
In the end, Bauer claims he is “offended” that Americans United was rewarded attorneys’ fees in this case. Well, here’s some advice to him and the South Carolina legislature on how to avoid that in the future: stop violating the Constitution.
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Subject: Graph compares rock music quality with US oil production 1949-2007Source: Boing BoingAuthor: Mark Frauenfelder![]()
From
GOOD: “The remarkable similarity between the arcs of U.S. oil production and songs in Rolling Stone’s “500 Greatest Songs of All Time” by year is staggering.” (Graph created by Overthinkingit.com)
This is so bad ass! I wish I could be there! Ivar and Inge on the same stage! If y’all haven’t heard of Inge Rypdal, you have to check out Emmerhoff & The Melancholy Babies, great stuff. Inge also played lead guitar on A Darker Place on Below the Lights.
Subject: Ivar Bjornson Trio to perform at Holland’s November Music, Den BoschSource: www.roadburn.comAuthor: RoadburnThe Ivar Bjornson Trio, comprised of Enslaved’s Ivar Bjornson, Grutle Kjellson and Inge Rypdal (Emmerhoff & The Melancholy Babies) will perform at Holland’s November Music on Saturday, November 14 at the w2 in Den Bosch (21:00) and on Sunday, November 15 at Stedelijk Museum in Den Bosch (14:00); playing the soundtrack of Dansmachine4, featuring performances by Scapino ballet’s Brandon O’ Dell as well as VJ Stalker’s interactive art installation.
“And this is relevant… why?” we can hear you thinking. Well, it just so happens that the music for VJ Stalker’s “Dansmachine4” was composed by Ivar Bjornson. Bet you didn’t know he was into ballet!
Shortly prior to Roadburn 2009, VJ Stalker (who provided the visuals for Wolves in the Throne Room at Roadburn 2009) presented a new work at this year’s STRP Festival in Eindhoven. Dansmachine4 is an interactive art installation that explores dance movements and body language. The installation is manipulated by those viewing and experiencing it. Their movements are projected in elegent projected images, given within the choreography specially made for Dansmachine4, written by Ed Wubbe and performed by Brandon O’Dell, both Scapino Ballet Rotterdam. The original soundtrack is written and performed by Ivar Bjornson of the Norwegian progressive metal band Enslaved. Dansmachine4 is an ode to the beauty of the moving body, at once powerfull and fragile.
VJ Stalker will now present his work at Holland’s renowned November Music, including the first ever live performances of the soundtrack by the Ivar Bjornson Trio.
Installation:
Dansmachine4, Stedelijk Museum ’s-Hertogenbosch, November 11 — 15, 13:00 to 17:00.Performances:
Dansmachine4: Ivar Bjørnson Trio, W2, November 14th , 21:00
Dansmachine4: Scapino Ballet & Ivar Bjørnson Trio, Stedelijk Museum, November 15th, 14:00 and 15:00.
Here Is a great Post by i John Scalz , author of a book I am currently reading The Android’s Dream, of Scott Westerfeld’s book Leviathan.
Subject: The Big Idea: Scott WesterfeldSource: WhateverAuthor: John Scalzi
You can’t accuse Scott Westerfeld of not thinking big. When he put together his latest trilogy, of which his terrific new novel Leviathan is the first installment, he not only reordered history by providing an alternate version of World War I, but also also fiddled with biology, technology and indeed the whole general run of scientific advancement from the 19th century forward into the 20th, by positing the existence of both vast, clanking machines of war and amazing new genetically-designed creatures, also used for (you got it!) war.
And to top it all off — and this is something Westerfeld’s particularly proud of — he decided to reimagine the way people read novels here in the 21st century. You know, just for kicks.
How did he did this? Well, in this Big Idea, not only will Westerfeld tell you, he will show you.
SCOTT WESTERFELD:
A picture is worth a thousand words, so let’s start with this:
Okay. It’s night, and moonlight streams through the camouflage netting, suggesting hiding and sneaking. (And, cheating a bit, the caption says “Stealing Away.”) The spiked helmets tell us that it’s World War I. A pair of Iron Crosses suggest Germany, but then we spot a tiny Hapsburg crest, so it’s Austria-Hungary. A young boy is pulling on his glove, preparing to drive the HOLY CRAP IT’S A WALKING TANK.
That is, in a nutshell, what I’ve come to love about illustration: in one glance you can mix storytelling with world-building, the familiar with the outlandish, and the fastidiously accurate with the Just Plain Historically Wrong. Unlike linear text, images dump all their information all at once, letting the viewer “read” the result in whatever order their brain sees fit.
My new book, Leviathan, has about fifty of these visual info-dumps, all masterfully executed by Keith Thompson. Mind you, I didn’t start writing the trilogy with illustrations in mind, but about sixty pages in, I had a Big Idea.
In ye olden days—let’s say 1914, when Leviathan is set—most novels were published with pictures. Whether you were reading Charles Dickens, Jane Austin, or H.G. Wells, you expected to find a half-dozen plates among the pages. And these images had great power in shaping an author’s work. For example, Sherlock Holmes’ deerstalker cap does not appear in Arthur Conan Doyle’s text, only in Sidney Paget’s drawings, and yet it’s part of our iconic image of the character.
Why these pictures disappeared is open to debate. It may have been the explosion of cheap paperbacks, or the collapse of the illustration industry after newspapers, advertising, and mail-order catalogs started using photographs. It may have been changes in literacy rates, or the advent of film or comics as mass media. But for whatever reason, novels for adults gradually became illustration-free over the middle of the last century. Novels for teenagers followed suit soon thereafter.
(Dear pickers of nits: I am aware that graphic novels exist. But I’m talking about prose novels with illustrations, which are a different form altogether.)
The Leviathan trilogy is set in an alternate history with alternate technologies, so I thought to myself, what if novels hadn’t lost their images? What if, instead of shrinking to zero, the number of illustrations in the average book had increased to, say, fifty?
In the world of Leviathan, technology has split into two tribes: the Germanic Clankers, who are machine lovers, and the British-led Darwinists, who weave the life-threads of natural creatures into fabricated beasts. (To put it simply, in this world, Origins of Species was an instruction manual.) So I needed someone who could draw both fantastical machines and strange creatures. Keith Thompson fit that bill perfectly. He’s been a conceptual artist for films and video games (like Iron Grip and Borderlands), so creating new worlds has been his job for a long time. But what sort of new world?
Leviathan is often described as a steampunk series, and fair enough (walking tanks!). But it hews closer to alternate history than most steampunk, with the son of the Archduke Ferdinand a character, and the timeline for the early war matching our own history closely. But in a way, the most “alternate” thing about it for me was simply writing an illustrated novel.
For one thing, I had to become an art director. (To maintain creative control, I agreed to pay Keith with my own money rather than the publisher’s. This is not the usual way with an illustrated book.) This new role meant knowing all sorts of details that a prose novelist could ignore. Sure, before writing this series, I would often claim to have imagined every scene down to the last detail. But that was all lies! Turns out, I didn’t really know what kind of wallpaper was in this room, or what sort of boots that character had on at that moment.
And it’s not just the details; there are also big-picture issues to contend with. In Leviathan, the Great War is not simply between two treaty-groups of countries, or two ideologies; it’s between two technologies. So to represent them, Keith had to create two opposing aesthetics. As you can see from the Stormwalker above, Clanker design has that clunky futurist, WWI-tank look. The Darwinists are more organic and art nouveau. Take a peek at Captain’s Hobbes’ cabin, where a nautilus motif appears in the mirror frame, the fabricated-wood desk, and his cufflinks and hat. (All of that Keith’s idea.)
Every image has to help build the world, or it’s a wasted thousand words.
On top of all this art direction, illustrated books require a different pace of storytelling. The series I’m best known for, Uglies, has more hoverboard chases than slow conversational scenes. But with an image gracing every chapter, stuff really has to happen in Leviathan. And not only is action important, but my characters have to arrive at new and wondrous settings to keep the backgrounds fresh. (It’s just lucky they have an airship.)
And finally, there’s the technical side of illustration: the aspect ratio of the trim size effects every composition; there are contrast issues (can’t write too many scenes at night); and even the type of paper becomes important! Luckily, I had a very indulgent publisher who gave me seventy-pound paper (only thirty pounds short of cookbook weight) and an amazing design team. They budgeted for color end-papers, which allowed Keith an amazing allegorical map of Europe. The result is a beautiful book, and one heavy enough to stun a lupine tigeresque.
So let yourself imagine if technology really had taken a different turn, and no one had invented photography, or if cheap paperbacks, or comics, or whatever it was that killed illustrated novels had never appeared. All of us writers would be facing a different set of challenges every day, and making novels would be far more research-intensive and collaborative than it is today. Imagine how a cultural imperative of fifty pictures per book might have changed the works of Charlie Stross, Octavia Butler, Salman Rushdie, or Angela Carter.
Now that would be an alternate world worth visiting.
—-
Leviathan: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Powell’s
Visit the Leviathan page, which includes links to an excerpt, the audio version of the first chapter, read by Alan Cumming, and other goodies. Follow Scott Westerfeld on Twitter. See a gallery of Leviathan illustrator Keith Thompson’s work.
The Murder Re-Enacted
Posted by Neil at 8:21 AM
The Graveyard Book just won a literary award, which never gets old, and this one came with a medal, and also with a cheque. I thought, Hm. I have to get myself something with the cheque and I have to do it immediately, otherwise it will simply vanish into the day to day bank account of life, and I will never look at anything and go “Ah, that is the thing I got with my Graveyard Book Award.”So I bought this. It’s “The Murder Re-Enacted”:It’s an E. H. Shepard illustration (he’s most famous for illustrating Winnie the Pooh) from Kenneth Grahame’s book The Golden Age. Kenneth Grahame wrote The Wind In The Willows, the story of Mole and Rat and Badger and of course, Mr Toad, also illustrated by Shepard.I once read an essay by A.A. Milne telling people that, of course they knew Kenneth Grahame’s work, he wrote The Golden Age and Dream Days, everybody had read them, but he also did this amazing book called The Wind in the Willows that nobody had ever heard of. And then Milne wrote a play called Toad of Toad Hall, which was a big hit and made The Wind in The Willows famous and read, and, eventually, one of the good classics (being a book that people continue to read and remember with pleasure), while The Golden Age and Dream Days, Grahame’s beautiful, gentle tales of Victorian childhood, are long forgotten.If there is a moral, or a lesson to be learned from all this, I do not know what it is.Right. Off to K.N.O.W. St Paul to record the intro bits to my NPR piece on Audio Books, and I will play the Martin Jarvis-read GOOD OMENS on the car CD player all the way there.Labels: A A Milne, audio books, fame, The Wind in the Willows










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