The Southern Literary Trail is a cooperative project involving writers' homes and other literary landmarks in three states: Alabama, Georgia, and Mississippi. Representatives from historic literary sites in eighteen Southern towns are planning events for a Tri-State Festival in March 2009.
The Southern Literary Trail Web site provides a calendar of the events planned for the Festival, information about the writers and their towns, and contact information for the member organizations. There is also a gallery of images of the writers created by artist Maralyn Wilson.
Midge Coates, Project Manager
This Goodly Land: Alabama's Literary Landscape
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Video: Update: William Bartram Lecture Now on YouTube
The William Bartram lecture given by Dr. John C. Hall (discussed in an earlier entry) has just been made available on YouTube.
Watch Dr. Hall's lecture on William Bartram on YouTube.
We have also added Dr. Hall's lecture to our SplashCast™ channel. To watch it here, scroll down and click on the Start button.
Midge Coates, Project Manager
This Goodly Land: Alabama's Literary Landscape
Watch Dr. Hall's lecture on William Bartram on YouTube.
We have also added Dr. Hall's lecture to our SplashCast™ channel. To watch it here, scroll down and click on the Start button.
Midge Coates, Project Manager
This Goodly Land: Alabama's Literary Landscape
Labels:
Bartram (William),
Hall (John C.),
lectures,
video,
YouTube
Thursday, August 7, 2008
SplashCast™ Added to Blog
If you scroll down a bit, you'll find a new addition to our This Goodly Land blog. The SplashCast™ application allows us to bring videos together from different sources and make them available to you in one convenient place.
We are currently showcasing the videos from the Albert Murray Symposium (mentioned in an earlier blog entry).
Click on the Start button in the middle of the screen to begin the Albert Murray "show" with the Introduction video. Hover your mouse cursor over the lower portion of the screen to access the controls and/or to select one of the other videos in this "show."
Click on the More Shows button to see videos on Tom Franklin, Homer Hickam, and Edward O. Wilson. We'll add more videos on our authors as they become available and/or as we locate them.
Midge Coates, Project Manager
This Goodly Land: Alabama's Literary Landscape
We are currently showcasing the videos from the Albert Murray Symposium (mentioned in an earlier blog entry).
Click on the Start button in the middle of the screen to begin the Albert Murray "show" with the Introduction video. Hover your mouse cursor over the lower portion of the screen to access the controls and/or to select one of the other videos in this "show."
Click on the More Shows button to see videos on Tom Franklin, Homer Hickam, and Edward O. Wilson. We'll add more videos on our authors as they become available and/or as we locate them.
Midge Coates, Project Manager
This Goodly Land: Alabama's Literary Landscape
Wednesday, August 6, 2008
This Goodly Land Fan Page on Facebook®
The “Find us on Facebook®” badge you see in the left-hand column of this blog represents a new step for us. Facebook® is one of the two most widely known social networking programs (MySpace® being the other).
Although Facebook® is open to anyone over the age of eighteen, its user base skews towards high school and college students. Our Page is a way of spreading the word about This Goodly Land to a new audience.
If you’re a Facebook® member, please check out our This Goodly Land Page and become a fan. If you aren't a member (yet), you can still see a public version of our Page.
View This Goodly Land’s Page on Facebook®.
Midge Coates, Project Manager
This Goodly Land: Alabama's Literary Landscape
Although Facebook® is open to anyone over the age of eighteen, its user base skews towards high school and college students. Our Page is a way of spreading the word about This Goodly Land to a new audience.
If you’re a Facebook® member, please check out our This Goodly Land Page and become a fan. If you aren't a member (yet), you can still see a public version of our Page.
View This Goodly Land’s Page on Facebook®.
Midge Coates, Project Manager
This Goodly Land: Alabama's Literary Landscape
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