"day of silence" project.....
Apr. 14th, 2009 07:42 amBrett (
septimuswarren) is leading his glbt student group through the 'National Day of Silence' on Friday - to bring the topic of anti-glbt bullying, harrassment and name-calling to the forefront. Students will go the entire day without speaking.
He asked me to make him an LJ Icon that talked about the issue he could use here and on Facebook. I decided to do an animation using smileys or "emoticons". Something all "know" and use occasionally.....
Slide #1 - Is anti-LGBT name-calling, bullying and harassment happening at your school?

Slide #2 - What are you doing to end the silence?

Slide #3 - DAY OF SILENCE, April 17th 2009

and it animates like this:

It's a tough thing to design a piece like this that is 100x100 pixels.
thoughts? other ideas?
He asked me to make him an LJ Icon that talked about the issue he could use here and on Facebook. I decided to do an animation using smileys or "emoticons". Something all "know" and use occasionally.....
Slide #1 - Is anti-LGBT name-calling, bullying and harassment happening at your school?
Slide #2 - What are you doing to end the silence?
Slide #3 - DAY OF SILENCE, April 17th 2009
and it animates like this:
It's a tough thing to design a piece like this that is 100x100 pixels.
thoughts? other ideas?
no subject
Date: 2009-04-14 02:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-04-14 04:09 pm (UTC)Unfortunately, I know at my high school, this demonstration would be taken as a challenge from the bullies to go out of their way to MAKE someone talk that day. Wish the students well!
no subject
Date: 2009-04-14 04:47 pm (UTC)If I were to be seated in a room with these icons on the table, one to a page, and were invited to manipulate them at will while I waited for other members of a focus group to assemble, my first move would be, in slide #2, to move the icon up so that it rests between the second and third lines, to wit: "What are you doing to stop :-X the silence?"
If I liked how that looked (and my hypothesis is that I would), I would back up to slide #1 and move that icon up between the third and fourth lines, à la, "Is LGBT name-calling, bullying, and harassment 8-O happening at your school?"
My rationale in making these moves would be A) to get the graphic as close to the words I want to associate with it as possible (i.e., mistreatment phrases = shocking in #1 and silence = SOP in #2), and B) to move the focal points of each of the first two slides closer to the centers of their windows.
My broader rhetorical (in the sense of persuasion rather than of sophistry) question is, why plant such a powerful image of silence smack dab in the center of a story about ending silence? There's something that strikes me as somehow dissonant between the progression of meanings verbally vis-à-vis the progression of meanings verbally.
I think it's because the purpose of the day (though clearly not of the campaign) is to dramatize the silence: not the antidote, not yet; first things first.
I think perhaps I would use language in the second slide to ask something more along the lines of, "How would you feel if you didn't even have the option of speaking out against injustice?"—though obviously in pithier wording than that... It seems to me that the significance of a day of silence is to foster appreciation of our freedom of speech by showing us what we got *before* it's gone.
I agree that using the universally recognized symbolism of the emoticons is a powerful way to hook seamlessly into the vernacular with an economy of pixels.
(Note: I only went into this much detail because you asked. I'm not normally this intrusive unless I'm either being paid for it or solicited to contribute to a worthy effort pro bono.)
no subject
Date: 2009-04-14 04:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-04-14 05:04 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-04-14 05:54 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-04-14 07:04 pm (UTC)Do you have the option of adding a fifth "panel" between the first and second? I personally would like something that links the first two ideas with each other: that the anti-gay bullying is hidden (and therefore protected) by unacceptable silence. Without that further exposition, the word "silence" doesn't have anything to refer back to, and people have to make that jump. That's just me being fussy, though...
no subject
Date: 2009-04-14 07:09 pm (UTC)the official slogan is "what are you doing to end the silence?" yikes. thats a good catch.
I think Brett is going to use the third slide without an animation though.
no subject
Date: 2009-04-14 07:10 pm (UTC)http://www.dayofsilence.org/index.cfm
no subject
Date: 2009-04-14 10:18 pm (UTC)I was going to do the day of silence, but doing so would have fucked up my presentation group because we have to rehearse our oral presentation, due monday, and several members will be out of town over the weekend... so friday is our last chance to rehearse...
can't do that silent... which I know is the point... but I'm not going to screw over my partners after 3 months of work just to make a point.
no subject
Date: 2009-04-15 02:54 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-04-15 04:08 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-04-15 04:17 am (UTC)