Posts Tagged: language
Terms of Reference: Situating Certain Literary Transactions over Networked Services
Presentation by John Cayley (Brown University). Since the 1990s, to read and write with a computer has implied that we read and write with a network. We have been placed—you and I have placed ourselves—in the position of ‘using’ hardware and
Terms of Reference: Situating Certain Literary Transactions over Networked Services
Presentation by John Cayley (Brown University). Since the 1990s, to read and write with a computer has implied that we read and write with a network. We have been placed—you and I have placed ourselves—in the position of ‘using’ hardware and
TRANS.MISSION [A.DIALOUGE]: Locating Narrative Resonance in Transatlantic Communications Networks
Performance by J. R. Carpenter (University College Falmouth, Cornwall). TRANS.MISSION [A.DIALOUGE] is a computer-generated narrative spanning generations of transatlantic migrations, propagating across long-distance communications networks. The JavaScript source code generates another sort of script, an asynchronous dialogue to be read
TRANS.MISSION [A.DIALOUGE]: Locating Narrative Resonance in Transatlantic Communications Networks
Performance by J. R. Carpenter (University College Falmouth, Cornwall). TRANS.MISSION [A.DIALOUGE] is a computer-generated narrative spanning generations of transatlantic migrations, propagating across long-distance communications networks. The JavaScript source code generates another sort of script, an asynchronous dialogue to be read
“Her Lips Are Copper Wire”: Linguistics, Networks, and the Great Migration
Presentation by Erin E. Edwards (Miami University). This paper forms an assemblage between Jean Toomer’s 1923 Cane and Deleuze and Guattari’s “November 20, 1923—Postulates of Linguistics,” from A Thousand Plateaus. November 20, 1923, marks the date when the Weimar Republic
“Her Lips Are Copper Wire”: Linguistics, Networks, and the Great Migration
Presentation by Erin E. Edwards (Miami University). This paper forms an assemblage between Jean Toomer’s 1923 Cane and Deleuze and Guattari’s “November 20, 1923—Postulates of Linguistics,” from A Thousand Plateaus. November 20, 1923, marks the date when the Weimar Republic