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tv   Arts and Culture  Deutsche Welle  August 6, 2019 7:45pm-8:01pm CEST

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the american novelist toni morrison who died on monday night aged 88 is of course best remembered for her book beloved it won her so many fans and so many accolades to morrison once said we die that may be the maining of life but we do language that may be the measure of our lives wise words a look back now at her extraordinary life greg maddux solution a technical in toni morrison's career the 1st african american nobel literature laureate receiving the presidential award of freedom from america's 1st african-american president barack obama in 2012. her path to success was studded with obstacles that she overcame with defiant inspired by her grandfather as she remembered in a documentary the pieces i am released earlier this year. my grandfather.
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and it was illegal in his life. that were. before becoming a writer morrison made her way up the male dominated world of new york publishing always fearless she soon realized that she and not the old white males around her was the smartest person in the room i was more interesting then. she turned the status quo of white perception on its head when talk show host dick cavett asked her a provocative question. i prefer. well i'm tired of people asking the question. later oprah winfrey's book club helped toni morrison become a household name her novels such as the bluest eye song of solomon and beloved went beyond bestseller status they contributed to
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a shift in african-american storytelling a style that embraced ruthless honesty. toni morrison empowered countless readers and will be remembered as a force of nature in the world of literature and beyond. colleague david leavitt's joins me now as you mentioned this year's molnar runs she was a force of nature and it's so inspiring just watching her in some of those old interviews you know what's so inspiring about her is that as an author and as a person she stood for dignity in the face of hardship and racism and oppression you know when she started writing when she published her 1st novel as a single mother at age 40 stories about black americans were not considered literature for everyone they were really put in a box but she made stories about black americans world literature and she showed a lot of people along the way both in america and around the western world that great literature does not have to be just about white people and we sold in the
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piece barack obama giving her the presidential medal of freedom and indeed we've just heard from obama on twitter he just said toni morrison was a national treasure as good a storyteller a captivating in person as she was on the page a right she was a beautiful meaningful challenge to our conscience and moral imagination what a gift to breathe the same. if only for a while. well yeah wow it is great he writes quite well what has impact on the united states as a whole well she's largely credited with un censoring big chapters of american history if you will to do with racism to do with slavery and in her books and also she's captured a mayor an african-american history and experiences in a way that a lot of black people in america didn't feel that they had been understood before
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and when someone. really understands he really sees your rights great literature about you that's an inspiration and beyond being an inspiration as an editor toni morrison made a lot of or. i'm on the shelves for many other great black authors including angela davis. beloved was a most famous book but i know there's another book particularly struck you're right well she did write 11 novels she wrote children's stories she wrote books of essays but actually her very 1st book the bluest eye that she brought out 1070 is one that people are still reading and and it's a really compelling story about not just racism but internalized racism it's about a young girl named picoult who grows up in morrisons hometown in ohio and she's taunted by the other kids because of her dark features and her dark hair and her dark eyes so much so that she actually believes that she is ugly and she prays to
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god for him to give her blue eyes now it's also a story about sexual abuse because it is raped by her father and what's really amazing about the way that toni morrison tells the story and tells other stories is she puts you so much in the heads of her characters she she doesn't demonize because father she actually humanizes him by telling you about his trauma and that doesn't excuse him but that was really her greatest gift was humanizing her characters do you live it's thank you very much tony robbins morrison fantastic rise of a fantastic woman as well thank you for. moving on and i have to say i'm not the most relaxed flying but if i had to choose to a full of aerial transports it would be a whole balloon it's all my bucket list of things to do and when i see a beautifully designed balloon up in the skies it gets my interest going again like
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now we're off to one of the biggest balloon festivals in the world in france. place there is yet. the event is one of the biggest of its kind in the world. enthusiasm the festival in champlain in northeastern france is the place to be. it was started there she years ago by a man from a family with a legendary ancestor. my wrong while the father say that. i was seeing the true album and. bush. i mean the story because it's my dwelling wrong wrong wrong or as productive it always was there were. a tab i lowered. that was in
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1793. this year the ground is monday i'll ever loan so nearly $500.00 balloons lift off bought the people who pallet them a still pretty rare so there's a real novelty element to be a rival of the balloonists from some funky different nations at the launch area of the 10 days of the festival some 500000 visitors will watch them lift off twice a day in the middle of the rain rachel nature pop. women are still in the minority among the lunacy it's. one of the 40 women pilots is in from latvia. with more than 500 hours in the air she's among the most experienced pilots. but even for her this kind of mass launch is a special challenge. a power telling of
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course reversed if your fly alone or if you're fired just because of some of the ones in the sky it's less this. this tyrant. live in the want to work on the balloons it's just it's just the bench and tension because you don't want to disturb any other war and of course done done done which my balloon and it's. certainly a boat so he said and they did say. one of the highlights of the festival is the night when the balloon stay on the ground that are inflated so they closed from within it's a special spectacle from an impressive festival in the motherland of hot air ballooning. i just think it's got to be the best way to see the earth not just go to pluck up courage to go up in the hall to evolution anyway. is changing the whole experience a visiting
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a museum or mentored reality can show you the real painting and an altered version side by side that's exactly what they are to vive does it can add a digital there to an artwork thereby opening up a whole new world when it comes to viewing a painting for instance you can now see how the painting changed as the art has painted it. busy busy diving into an image losing ourselves inside it. is that enough for us. possible. here the in a life of a painting by egon schiele that has been revealed thanks to all commented reality the technology makes the earlier versions of the work visible not just under an x. ray but on a smartphone as well. mentored reality puts
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digital layers over the actual artwork and you don't need special to see it we're still in the here and now but the smartphone allows us to expand what we see download the app hold just phone up to the picture and voila pictures suddenly come to life on walls on the streets and in museums so. this is the birthplace of the past 5 it's one of several startups trying to make a mark internationally with the concept. it's a new art form just like film or photography at the end of the 19th century and we're seeing that augmented reality is truly becoming an art medium overturning from. the start up is also a gallery artists exhibit their works there and give importance for the further development of the app. the artist little has been involved from the start.
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thanking you reach a point where it's just finished but with reality you have the added component of time so you can show something over a certain period of time. online overlap. not the picture on the wall is the art was the combination of it with the digital elements. the process is the most important part but in astonishing point remains the menu of thanks. so perhaps the smartphone is only an intermediate stage and in the future will stand in front of paintings swiping away certainly these apps are also gimmicks but who doesn't like secret insights and useless bits of detail information and after all the artworks themselves remain. soon
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you won't need to go to a museum with a mixture of virtual reality you'll be able to experience it all in your living room but i shouldn't say that please support museums they are wonderful institutions that's over this edition of arts and culture more on the website of course dot com slash culture on facebook. cannot.
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kick off. the past season with the highest scoring sings on its millennium. there was some great line. for your edification once more with feeling. very fast this season. you can. see minutes d w s. the world is getting more numerous moons catastrophes a lot of problems. the global $3000.00 talks with senior british researchers who take a month off to mystic view. while it is not always a good place but it's much much better than it was an hour just a movie really getting better. a global $3000.00 special report. starts august 19th on g.w. .
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humans love interaction and sometimes you don't have it if you're about well provided that's great they're going to replace people in manufacturing they're going to replace doctors and lawyers they're going to replace people in jobs you wouldn't think they can if all the work is being done by machines what humans do they try and keep getting better and better education and taking more and more advanced jobs or do they end up doing other things making art having social interaction with each other are we going to have enough humanity to make it possible for everyone or some people are going to say i want everything and the rest you guys have to be poor and i think that allows individuals to discover their humanity they have to learn a new meaning for life and the new things to do that's a social revolution that hopefully we can move through slowly.
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play. this is news live from berlin beijing warns hong kong protesters punishment is coming police make mass arrests after clashes with pro-democracy demonstrators as ongoing street battles plunge the city into crisis we will speak with protest leader joshua long also coming up pakistan's prime minister urges international intervention after india revokes kashmir special status tensions are on the rise as delhi's radical move raises fears of fresh violence and the.

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