Writing Assignments

Data of the Dead

_cokwr: Take stock of your digital identity and prepare for the inevitable. In a blog post submit your last will and testament, describe how you wish to be digitally remembered, and will your embedded digital ephemera to [less then]loved ones. Inspired by: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/09/magazine/09Immortality-t.html, _cpzh4: Writing, _chk2m: Michael Branson Smith, _ciyn3: 132, _ckd7g: , _clrrx: , _cztg3:

Susan Carter Morgan’s Tell me a story

_cokwr: Everything has a story. So, find an item that you have an extreme emotional attachment to, take a picture of it, and tell the story! Convey all the emotion and feeling, and let us know why the item is important to you!, _cpzh4: Writing, _cre1l: http://takterajima.blogspot.com/2011/10/tell-me-story.html, _chk2m: Takeru Terajima, _ciyn3: 205, _ckd7g: , _clrrx: , _cztg3:

haiku it up

_cokwr: For the writing assignment, take a random Dailyshoot photograph and create a haiku using that image. Let the image inspire you to create a poetic haiku. Don't know what a haiku is? The most common form for Haiku is three short lines. The first line usually contains five (5) syllables, the second line seven (7) syllables, and the third line contains five (5) syllables. Haiku doesn't rhyme., _cpzh4: Writing, _chk2m: anagahama, _ciyn3: 104, _ckd7g: , _clrrx: , _cztg3: