Difference between revisions of "Threnody"

m
m (number format)
 
(3 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''''Threnody''''' is a famous portrait by the 21 Century [[Terra|Terran]] artist [[Alessandro Mekam]].  The portrait encapsulates the character of pre-[[First Exodus]]: a child dying of malnutrition transfixed by the glow of a [[holovid]], then a cutting edge technology.  The portrait was particularly apropos, as the [[Western Alliance]] had focused its efforts on technological innovations, and while the Alliance did try to stamp out hunger and disease, its efforts (especially when pitted against increasing population size) were not sufficient.<ref>''House Davion (The Federated Suns)'', p. 7</ref>
+
'''''Threnody''''' is a famous portrait by the twenty-first-century [[Terra|Terran]] artist [[Alessandro Mekam]].  The portrait encapsulates the character of pre–[[First Exodus]]: a child dying of malnutrition transfixed by the glow of a [[holovid]], then a cutting edge technology.  The portrait was particularly apropos, as the [[Western Alliance]] had focused its efforts on technological innovations, and while the Alliance did try to stamp out hunger and disease, its efforts (especially when pitted against increasing population size) were not sufficient.<ref>''House Davion (The Federated Suns)'', p. 7</ref>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
Line 7: Line 7:
 
* ''[[House Davion (The Federated Suns)]]''
 
* ''[[House Davion (The Federated Suns)]]''
  
[[Category:Miscellaneous]]
+
[[Category:In-Universe Media]]

Latest revision as of 22:54, 23 March 2023

Threnody is a famous portrait by the twenty-first-century Terran artist Alessandro Mekam. The portrait encapsulates the character of pre–First Exodus: a child dying of malnutrition transfixed by the glow of a holovid, then a cutting edge technology. The portrait was particularly apropos, as the Western Alliance had focused its efforts on technological innovations, and while the Alliance did try to stamp out hunger and disease, its efforts (especially when pitted against increasing population size) were not sufficient.[1]

References[edit]

  1. House Davion (The Federated Suns), p. 7

Bibliography[edit]