Calliope Witherington on Fri, 22 Feb 2002 23:57:01 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] Commander Europa |
Dear Mr. Reinprecht, I am overseeing a committee charged with cataloguing, classifying, and analyzing the dissemination of information concerning supra- and transnational political and trade entities to young people around ten years of age. We are especially interested in studying any and all texts by Earth's largest trading blocs that aim to clarify to young children the policies of those blocs, especially as regards their goodwill and concern for the citizenry and for children in general. We have already performed several highly respected comparative and analytical studies on texts in this category. Such texts include, for example, the Organization of American States' "Chant to the OAS," which conveys the OAS's benefits to children everywhere through the use of rhythm and rhyme (http://www.oas.org/children/chant.html). Others include the World Trade Organization's recently commissioned graphic novel, "Never Better," that cleverly explains to poor African children, through the use of football metaphors, the benefits of free world trade and the evils of protectionism; NATO's 1999 "Here's Where They Fall," a beautiful alphabet picture-book communicating to small Serbian children the purpose and value of the NATO bombings; and "Color Me Free"--"Colorame Libro"--the IMF's coloring-book explanation of modern economic policies for young South Americans. It is in this spirit that we are very interested in your use of the Commander Europa item of which I have recently read an account (at http://minorities.orf.at/austria/en/archiv02/010521_en.htm, half way down the page). As head of the European Parliament's Information Office in Vienna, your choice of this book is very interesting to us, especially in light of the fact that it is being distributed to all Austrian pupils from 10 to 14. The following questions will help us to accomplish our analytical task: * As representative of the European Parliament you have a great responsibility to assure that the materials that best and most clearly convey the spirit and aims of the European Union reach the children of the member states. You evidently feel that Commander Europa does this quite well, at least so far as Austria is concerned. Could you cite specific examples from the book that convinced you to choose it? * You say, at http://archiv.kurier.at/archiv/display.php3?PIC=testtextarch/j2002/q1/m02/t11/s003/001_001.dcs, that "For years we have been bringing older pupils to Strasbourg. For younger ones there is nothing, that can make the EU more understandable. Now, with this book, we are doing something for the voters of tomorrow." Could you be more specific? What is the effect you would like to see Commander Europa have on the voters of tomorrow? What elements of the Commander Europa book might accomplish this? Specific examples would help us greatly in our evaluation. * With which of author Thomas Brezina's other books does Commander Europa have the most in common? Dragonheart? Knickerbocker-Club? Tiger-Team? * Do you hope/expect to see Commander Europa translated into other European languages, or is it specifically appealing to Austrians, in your opinion? * What is your opinion of Captain Euro (http://www.captaineuro.com/), another text product geared to clarifying pan-European economic policy for young children? Is there any relationship between Commander Europa and Captain Euro, on any level, in your opinion? I thank you very much for your attention and help in this matter, and wish you the best of luck in the complex and gruelling task of conveying the right information at the right age. With very best wishes, Calliope Witherington Child Information Study Group _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold