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星子[ANNA] 星子作品集 酷我!I made it!
注册时间: 2004-06-05 帖子: 13192 来自: Toronto
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发表于: 星期二 九月 18, 2007 12:58 pm 发表主题: |
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Champagne 写到: | Hi! Anna:
What do you mean by a "marvellous totem"?
It should be understood in the sense of poetic imagination, or of Freudian psychology, or of the physicality of the Great Wall? |
Both poetic imagination and scientic fact.
The Great Wall can be viewed on the moon, is a marvellous miracle.
It also became an icon of China, Chinese. _________________
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Champagne[Champagne] Champagne作品集 四品府丞 (封疆大吏也!)
注册时间: 2007-09-15 帖子: 394 来自: Nowhere & Everywhere
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发表于: 星期二 九月 18, 2007 2:10 pm 发表主题: |
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Hi! 星子:
I think you need to re-think this so-called scientific fact about the Great Wall of China, the only man-made object visible from space, and the historic foundation on which the Great wall was built. Throughout the unofficial literary tradition of Chinese poetry writing, one can easily find that there are many a heart-breaking and soul-wrenching poems on the unbearable heaviness of the "great achievement" of the Great wall. That is why, I think, ericcoliu was “disquieted by the cognitive mapping of The Great Wall of China revealed in The Great Wall, especially by that of the second stanza, which is deeply rooted in the official, propagandized history” anout The Great Wall.
Below are two excerpts regading the visibility of The Great Wall of China from space, one from the NASA webpage entitled
China's Wall Less Great in View from Space, accessed at http://72.14.205.104/search?q=cache:8JFSaalsaG0J:www.nasa.gov/vision/space/workinginspace/great_wall.html+great+wall+of+china+from+space&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=6&gl=ca
"China's Wall Less Great in View from Space 05.09.05
It has become a space-based myth. The Great Wall of China, frequently billed as the only man-made object visible from space, generally isn't, at least to the unaided eye in low Earth orbit. It certainly isn't visible from the Moon.
You can, though, see a lot of other results of human activity.
The visible wall theory was shaken after China's own astronaut, Yang Liwei, said he couldn’t see the historic structure. There was even talk about rewriting textbooks that espouse the theory, a formidable task in the Earth’s most populous nation. "
Another one is from the Wikipedia entry entitled Great Wall of China, accessed at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_great_wall:
"Visibility from the moon
The Great Wall of China as seen in a false-color radar image from the Space Shuttle, taken in April 1994Ripley's Believe It or Not! cartoon from May 1932 explains the fact that the wall is "the mightiest work of man, the only one that would be visible to the human eye from the moon" and Richard Halliburton's 1938 book Second Book of Marvels makes a similar claim. This belief has persisted, assuming urban legend status, sometimes even entering school textbooks. Arthur Waldron, author of history of the Great Wall, has speculated that the belief might go back to the fascination with the "canals" once believed to exist on Mars. (The logic was simple: If people on Earth can see the Martians' canals, the Martians might be able to see the Great Wall.)
The Great Wall is a maximum 30 ft (9.1m) wide and is about the same color as the soil surrounding it. Based on the optics of resolving power (distance versus the width of the iris: a few millimetres for the human eye, metres for large telescopes) an object of reasonable contrast to its surroundings some four thousand miles in diameter (such as the Australian land mass) would be visible to the unaided eye from the moon (average distance from earth 238,857 miles (384,393 km)). But the Great Wall is of course not a disc but more like a thread, and a thread a foot (30cm) long would not be visible from a hundred yards (90 m) away, even though a human head is. Not surprisingly, no lunar astronaut has ever claimed he could see the Great Wall from the moon.
Visibility from near earth orbit
A different question is whether it is visible from near-Earth orbit, i.e at an altitude of less than 500 kilometers (311 mi) (0.1% of the distance of the moon). The consensus here is that it is barely visible, and only under nearly perfect conditions; it is no more conspicuous than many other manmade objects.
Astronaut William Pogue thought he had seen it from Skylab but discovered he was actually looking at the Grand Canal of China near Beijing. He spotted the Great Wall with binoculars, but said that "it wasn't visible to the unaided eye." US Senator Jake Garn claimed to be able to see the Great Wall with the naked eye from a space shuttle orbit in the early 1980s, but his claim has been disputed by several US astronauts. Chinese astronaut Yang Liwei said he could not see it at all.
Veteran US astronaut Gene Cernan has stated: "At Earth orbit of 160 kilometers (99 mi) to 320 kilometers (199 mi) high, the Great Wall of China is, indeed, visible to the naked eye." Ed Lu, Expedition 7 Science Officer aboard the International Space Station, adds that, "it's less visible than a lot of other objects. And you have to know where to look."
SeaNeil Armstrong stated about the view from Apollo 11: "I do not believe that, at least with my eyes, there would be any man-made object that I could see. I have not yet found somebody who has told me they've seen the Wall of China from Earth orbit. ... I've asked various people, particularly Shuttle guys, that have been many orbits around China in the daytime, and the ones I've talked to didn't see it." [6]
Leroy Chiao, a Chinese-American astronaut, took a photograph from the International Space Station that shows the wall. It was so indistinct that the photographer was not certain he had actually captured it. Based on the photograph, the China Daily later reported that the Great Wall can be seen from space with the naked eye, under favorable viewing conditions, if one knows exactly where to look.[7]" _________________ I'm Champagne,
Bottled poetry with sparkling joy. |
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anna[星子安娜] anna作品集 Site Admin
注册时间: 2004-05-02 帖子: 7141
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发表于: 星期二 九月 18, 2007 4:22 pm 发表主题: |
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Hi Champagne,
Glad to have your very detailed information.
Guess a lot of us have wrong fact. Then I would like to keep it as a poetic imagination. _________________ ---------------------
Anna Yin
《爱的灯塔-星子安娜双语诗选》
<Nightlights> <Seven Nights with the Chinese Zodiac> ...
http://annapoetry.com |
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Champagne[Champagne] Champagne作品集 四品府丞 (封疆大吏也!)
注册时间: 2007-09-15 帖子: 394 来自: Nowhere & Everywhere
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发表于: 星期六 八月 30, 2008 5:03 pm 发表主题: |
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I've revised and expanded my piece, especially the second stanza. _________________ I'm Champagne,
Bottled poetry with sparkling joy. |
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ericcoliu[ericcoliu] ericcoliu作品集 二品总督 (刚入二品,小心做人)
注册时间: 2007-05-29 帖子: 1393 来自: GTA, Canada
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发表于: 星期一 九月 08, 2008 9:45 am 发表主题: |
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Champagne 写到: |
Homesickness
When I was young
Homesickness was a long cable line
Me on one end
Mom on the other
When I grew up
Homesickness was a three-sheet letter
An hour’s labour
Sincerely written, carefully folded
Me on the outside
Mom on the inside
But later on
Homesickness was reduced to
2.69 + PST + GST
A seasonal greeting card
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In my view, the revised version, especially the second stanza has changed the tone of your original one. I was saddened by the concluding lines of the second stanza. All things have been commodified -- an inevitable destiny in a late-capitalist society.
By the way, I think you need a note on "PST+GST." _________________ Time is nothing but a disquiet of the soul |
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Champagne[Champagne] Champagne作品集 四品府丞 (封疆大吏也!)
注册时间: 2007-09-15 帖子: 394 来自: Nowhere & Everywhere
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发表于: 星期四 九月 11, 2008 9:07 am 发表主题: |
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Don't forget that now, you're a co-author.
Thanks for your reminder:
PST:Provincial sales tax in Canada
GST: Goods and Services Tax in Canada _________________ I'm Champagne,
Bottled poetry with sparkling joy. |
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Champagne[Champagne] Champagne作品集 四品府丞 (封疆大吏也!)
注册时间: 2007-09-15 帖子: 394 来自: Nowhere & Everywhere
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发表于: 星期四 九月 11, 2008 9:09 am 发表主题: |
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ericcoliu 写到: |
In my view, the revised version, especially the second stanza has changed the tone of your original one. I was saddened by the concluding lines of the second stanza. All things have been commodified -- an inevitable destiny in a late-capitalist society.
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Nobody can tell how much joy or sorrow
is carried in the mailman's bag. _________________ I'm Champagne,
Bottled poetry with sparkling joy. |
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