Checked content

File:Dhaka street crowds.jpg

Summary

Description
There is no way to imagine Dhaka's crowds repeating themselves without hearing their sounds. Staying the night in the hotel room from which this photo is taken doesn't give you sleep. Instead it teaches you what KAKAPHONIA really means: it means hearing any possible human sound you can think of at the same time, so that you provide yourself with the feverish threats for your culture shock (also if you're accustomed to In-dia). You'll hear what you think of - and you don't stop thinking. Actual sounds - including (in the middle of the night) marriage parties, political demonstrations, sirens, drums, shouting, market screams, passengers and riskah drivers hitting busses, claxoning, and who knows what kind of anguish - all combine into every known and not-yet-known rhythm.
To be sure, you know the same pattern is repeated endlessly along Dhaka's long roads where urban specialisation is not measured into neighbourhoods yet around every single building: in front of it: on the street, the pavement, below the pavement's market; the building's ground floor markets, its back yard, the first, second and higher floors, all with floor-specific businesses and characters, yet seemingly similar in every next building.
Date 17 May 2006, 12:14:36
Source Flickr
Author Ahron de Leeuw from Amsterdam, Netherlands
Reviewer ranveig

Licensing

Checked copyright icon.svg This image, which was originally posted to Flickr.com, was uploaded to Commons using Flickr upload bot on 22:30, 20 September 2007 (UTC) by Ranveig ( talk). On that date it was licensed under the license below.
w:en:Creative Commons
attribution
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.
You are free:
  • to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work
  • to remix – to adapt the work
Under the following conditions:
  • attribution – You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work).

SemiPD-icon.svg

Bangladesh

According to the "2000 Copyright Act of Bangladesh", artistic recreations of public architecture and art work are exceptions to the rights of authors.

Exceptions to infringement states:

The Copyright Act provides certain exceptions to infringement. The object of these provisions is to enable the encouragement of private study and research and promotion of education. They provide defences in an action for infringement. [...]
10. Making of a drawing, engraving or photograph of an architectural work of art, or a sculpture kept in a public place,
  • English Copyright law in Bangladesh

See Commons:Freedom of Panorama#Bangladesh for more information.


The following pages on Schools Wikipedia link to this image (list may be incomplete):

A background to Schools Wikipedia

SOS Childrens Villages chose the best bits of Wikipedia to help you learn. Thanks to SOS Children, 62,000 children are enjoying a happy childhood, with a healthy, prosperous future ahead of them. There are many ways to help with SOS Children's Villages.