-
https://911digitalarchive.org/files/original/66e6199c6f0b87c6b3f411c3fde43ec9.jpg
a961281f20a045dc1e89a99b78b9dd76
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
September 11 Digital Archive Images
Description
An account of the resource
This collection contains over 2,800 images submitted directly to the Archive by individuals of the attacks and their aftermath, but of other topics and materials of related interest.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
2015.jpeg
Description
An account of the resource
"Tower Two"
(110 lines woven from the contributions of invited poets) In the days and weeks following September 11th, New Yorkers were numbed by the gloomy silence that fell upon Lower Manhattan. The streets of Lower Manhattan lay eerily quiet and deserted, as if the avalanche of ashes from the Towers were a black and paralyzing snowfall.
Yet, beginning on the very day of the tragedy, when the distraught and bereaved began scrawling messages in the ash, and a student from NYU laid out a sheet of butcher block paper in Union Square, New Yorkers broke the silence with stories, poems, rituals and commemorative art. At the heart of the response were words -- words at first written in the dust near Ground Zero, on Missing Posters, makeshift memorials, scraps of paper posted on telephone booths, on index cards in Times Square, attached to ribbons on Canal Street, in chalk on the sidewalk, on firehouse walls.
The idea to build the towers back up in the way that only poets canin wordscame a few weeks later. Each poem tower would be 110 lines, one for each story of the Trade Towers. As word got out about the Twin Towers of Words, poets from all over the world submitted lines to our web site, www.peoplespoetry.org. For the second tower, we invited 110 established poets to contribute a line. Adrienne Rich, Robert Creeley, and Galway Kinnel were among the contributors. The two word towersalong with poetry from the shrineswere mounted as part of our traveling exhibit, Missing: Streetscape of a City in Mourning, at the New York Historical Society through July 7th. Below is a graphic image of the "word towers" that hang in the Missing exhibit-long, black, billowing cotton banners that were placed near a fountain toward the end of the exhibit. The towers are over 25-ft tall and these are only 15 inches high, but they should give you a sense of how they look in the show.
To see the full text of the poems see 911 Digital Archive Story # 9311 for Tower One and 911 Digital Archive Story # 9312 for Tower Two. Tower One includes poet Bob Holman's introductory comments; both include citations for each of the lines.
-- Steve Zeitlin, City Lore <www.citylore.org>
911DA Item
Elements describing a September 11 Digital Archive item.
Status
The process status of this item.
approved
Consent
Whether September 11 Digital Archive has permission to possess this item.
full
Posting
Whether the contributor gave permission to post this item.
yes
Copyright
Whether the contributor holds copyright to this item.
yes
Source
The source of this item.
unknown
Media Type
The media type of this item.
still image
Original Name
The original name of this item.
40towertwo-nyhs.jpg
Created by Author
Whether the author created this item.
yes
Described by Author
Whether the description of this item was submitted by the author.
yes
Date Entered
The date this item was entered into the archive.
2003-05-12
IP Address
The IP address of the device used to submit the item.
146.96.204.160
Annotation
Annotations to this item.
da
Notes
Notes about this item.
see story # 9312