Foreign minister says the horological initiative is intended to help people find their indigenous roots
From Sam Jones and Sara Shahriari in La Paz, the Guardian, Wednesday 25 June 2014 18.09 BST
In the latest – and by far the most literal – sign that times are changing in Bolivia, the numerals on the clock that adorns the congress building in La Paz have been reversed and the hands set to run anticlockwise in proud affirmation of the Andean nation's "southernness".
According to Bolivia's foreign minister, David Choquehuanca, the horological initiative is intended to help Bolivians rediscover their indigenous roots.
"We're in the south and, as we're trying to recover our identity, the Bolivian government is also recovering its sarawi, which means 'way' in Aymara," he said. "In keeping with our sarawi – or Nan, in Quechua – our clocks should turn to the left."
You can also buy 'left-handed' clocks in the UK (and I suppose anywhere else).
Monday, 30 June 2014
Tuesday, 17 June 2014
Florian at Harvard
Florian, PhD student now more than half way through his studies on visualisation of cultural data, is at Harvard for a fortnight.
He is one of 22 people chosen for this opportunity funded by the Getty Foundation.
About the event: http://metalab.harvard.edu/2014/01/beautiful-data-a-summer-institute-for-telling-stories-with-open-art-collections/
Florian's blog post: http://research.kraeutli.com/index.php/2014/06/beautiful-data-at-harvard-university/
And follow his tweets: @fkraeutli.
He is one of 22 people chosen for this opportunity funded by the Getty Foundation.
About the event: http://metalab.harvard.edu/2014/01/beautiful-data-a-summer-institute-for-telling-stories-with-open-art-collections/
Florian's blog post: http://research.kraeutli.com/index.php/2014/06/beautiful-data-at-harvard-university/
And follow his tweets: @fkraeutli.
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