Wed Apr 01, 2015 1:00 pm
quemerford wrote:Mods: can all these TIGHAR etc threads be merged please? Too much BS on the 'unread posts page'
It's also beginning to look like a carefully concocted attempt by TIGHAR to create more publicity. As if a group ever needed more.
Ta.
Wed Apr 01, 2015 2:50 pm
Thu Apr 02, 2015 1:20 pm
EagleFlight wrote:Jeffrey Neville wrote:Bottom line is, as time wears on I grow to believe more every day that this mystery may remain just that for all time: she may never be found - whether on the ocean floor, in the crags and grooves of a seamount slope or under the mud in ENB. That may be the razor's meanest cut of all.
And maybe, just maybe, that is the way it should be.
On the significance of the disappearance, Doris Rich, one of Earhart’s biographers, believes that “nothing she might have said or done, no scheme George Palmer Putnam might have designed, could so enhance Earhart’s renown as the mystery of her disappearance. She had been famous. By vanishing she became legendary.” By the same token, her disappearance ironically seems to have overtaken her life’s accomplishments as an aviator and advocate for women’s rights. Susan Ware, author of Still Missing: Amelia Earhart and the Search for Modern Feminism, points out that “with all the mythology surrounding Amelia Earhart’s last flight in 1937, it is hard to assess her career separately from the ongoing mystery of her disappearance.” Ware suggests that it is Earhart’s life, not the disappearance and presumed death that matters.
Thu Apr 02, 2015 6:55 pm
Jeffrey Neville wrote:
On the significance of the disappearance, Doris Rich, one of Earhart’s biographers, believes that “nothing she might have said or done, no scheme George Palmer Putnam might have designed, could so enhance Earhart’s renown as the mystery of her disappearance. She had been famous. By vanishing she became legendary.” By the same token, her disappearance ironically seems to have overtaken her life’s accomplishments as an aviator and advocate for women’s rights. Susan Ware, author of Still Missing: Amelia Earhart and the Search for Modern Feminism, points out that “with all the mythology surrounding Amelia Earhart’s last flight in 1937, it is hard to assess her career separately from the ongoing mystery of her disappearance.” Ware suggests that it is Earhart’s life, not the disappearance and presumed death that matters.
Jeffrey Neville wrote:The ladies have a real point, and people and airplanes do sometimes just disappear; isn't it who they were that got us interested in the first place?
Thinking of that, now I wonder - have we allowed the 'faucet of Earhart's fame' to intoxicate us?
Jeffrey Neville wrote:What are we doing???
Fri Apr 03, 2015 7:46 am