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Showing posts from January 20, 2012

Can great writing be taught?

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By Sarah Keating Today programme "There is nothing to writing," explained that master of minimalist prose, Ernest Hemingway. "All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed." But this year marks the 40th anniversary of the first university in Britain offering a course in creative writing, an event which suddenly threw open the possibility that a writer could be taught their craft. The creative writing course at the University of East Anglia (UEA) has produced an impressive list of alumni, including Booker Prize winners Ian McEwan, Kazuo Ishiguro and Anne Enright. But is creative writing really a skill that can be passed on in this way? The popularity of the formal teaching of writing is evident in the sheer number of courses currently availa

Film remembers 'exceptional' author WG Sebald

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With a new film due to document the writing of the highly influential author WG Sebald, the Today programme's Tom Bateman followed in his footsteps in East Anglia. The Suffolk coast in midwinter seems almost deserted. The sounds of footsteps from a lone dog walker are carried by occasional gusts of wind that flatten the overgrown grass fields set out before the beach begins. The village of Walberswick forms one part of the route in WG Sebald's The Rings of Saturn, a brooding work - part novel, part travel diary - drawing on the author's obsessions with history and the destructive forces of man and nature. WG Sebald died in a car accident in 2001 It is an area Sebald chose as an emblem for "continual destruction," says Grant Gee, a filmmaker who is releasing a new film based on Sebald's work . "The coastline is so s

Games company reveals details of Resident Evil 6

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Resident Evil 6 will be released in November 2012, Capcom have confirmed. The games developer announced they are currently working on the new instalment of the popular zombie series. An official trailer for the game was released on Thursday (19 January), and hinted that parts of it will be set in China. Resident Evil 6 is due to be released on 20 November for consoles, with a PC version of the game to follow soon after. Capcom said Chris Redfield and Leon Kennedy - characters from previous games in the series - would star alongside a number of new characters in RE6. A lot of fans thought Resident Evil 5 was too much action and not enough survival horror Matt Dahlgren Product Marketing Manager, Capcom Speaking about the game's plot, the company said: "It has been ten years since the Raccoon City incident and the President of the United States has decided to reveal the truth behind what took place in the belief that it

Hackers retaliate over Megaupload website shutdown

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Hackers retaliate over Megaupload website shutdown By Leo Kelion Technology reporter   Megaupload displayed a video with celebrity endorsements before it was shut down Hackers have targeted the US government and copyright organisations following the shutdown of the Megaupload file-sharing website. The Department of Justice (DoJ), FBI and the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) among others have been bombarded with internet traffic. Web links have been been distributed which, when clicked, make the user's computer part of the attack. A statement attributed to Anonymous claimed responsibility. Blackout protest The DoJ announced on Thursday that it had taken action to force Megaupload and related domain names offline, and had charged the firm's co-founders and others with violating piracy laws. Four of the employees have been arrested in Auckland, New Zealand, at the request of the US authorities.

Arctic Canada caught on 1919 silent film

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Arctic Canada caught on 1919 silent film By Chris Nikkel Documentary maker An extraordinary documentary filmed in 1919 to mark the 250th anniversary of the Hudson Bay Company has been restored for modern audiences. One of the world's early documentaries featured unique footage of the lives of Arctic fur trappers in 1919. After long being forgotten, it's now been restored for modern audiences in Canada, including communities descended from those featured in the silent film. In July 1919, the RMS Nascopie departed Montreal. It carried supplies bound for Arctic fur trade posts. But the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) ice-breaker had extra cargo on its annual trip. A film crew is on board. The ship headed north. As they travelled, a cameraman filmed the Nascopie crashing through ice floes. When the ship anchored, he went overboard, trudging across the ice with

Israel's fears of a nuclear Iran

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Israel's fears of a nuclear Iran By James Reynolds BBC News, Jerusalem   US General Martin Dempsey is the latest dignitary to visit the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial On a cold morning in Jerusalem, US General Martin Dempsey enters the main hall of Yad Vashem, Israel's Holocaust Memorial. As he steps through the door, he removes his military cap as a sign of respect and replaces it with a Jewish skullcap. A minute later, he is told that he can wear his own cap - and he makes a discreet swap of his headgear. The Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff then lays a wreath in remembrance of the six million Jews killed in the Holocaust. It is a familiar ritual. Each official visitor to Israel is taken to Yad Vashem. The visit is meant to convey Israel's central message: the Jewish people were once nearly destroyed - the state must protect against similar threats in the future. Some in Israel believe that this thr

Is it possible to have a happy open marriage?

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Is it possible to have a happy open marriage? By Daniel Nasaw BBC News, Washington Newt Gingrich and his now ex-wife, Marianne Gingrich, in happier times Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich's ex-wife has said they divorced after she rejected his request for an "open marriage". People in open marriages have told the BBC that if her version of events is true, the former House Speaker broached the subject the wrong way. Several years after their wedding, Jenny Block realised that even though she loved her husband and wanted to be with him, she needed more. Today, Ms Block, a writer, lives with Christopher in Dallas. Her girlfriend Jemma does not live with the couple - but spends a lot of time in the house. "It's been me and my girlfriend and me and my husband, and the two of them are really good friends, but they're not sexually involved," says Ms Block, 41, author of Open: Lov

Google revenues worse than expected

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Google revenues worse than expected The amount Google managed to charge advertisers per click fell 8% Google reported a 27% increase in revenues for the last three months of 2011, but even that was not good enough to meet Wall Street estimates, sending the shares tumbling. Google shares fell 10% in after-hours trading to $575. It reported 3-month revenues of $10.6bn (£6.8bn). Its net profit rose 6.4% to $2.7bn. "Google had a really strong quarter ending a great year," said chief executive Larry Page. "I am super excited about the growth of Android, Gmail, and Google+, which now has 90 million users globally - well over double what I announced just three months ago." It came as fellow technology firms Microsoft and Intel also posted results for the same period. Microsoft posted flat earnings of $6.62bn in the same quarter, seeing strong business demand for software and services. Intel, the world's largest chipmaker, posted a better-than