Korsakow biography?

It was a bit startling to figure out that these videos are going to function as elements in a biography about myself. Some of them are poorly made, others are just based on unimaginative ideas. How can this in any way represent me?

Then I thought, this is a great way of producing an autobiography. We have produced individual work, spawned from our imaginations. Why did I choose to make a video of red lips eating red fruit for the “red things you like” assignment? And why did I film postcard from my family for the task “describe your family without showing anyone”?

Somehow these videos show how I think, who I am, what represents certain aspects of my mind. This gets my head spinning on how text can be used to either repress this, or enhance it.

According to the assignment, we need to have text to every video. It doesn’t say what the text has to be. It could be one word, or a paragraph. Should I use it to explain why I made the videos the way I did? Or should I add text that builds up under the meaning of the video?

Does my videos in some way constitute a whole? Are there connections between all of them? Is there on reoccurring theme that can be made obvious? DOES IT MATTER?

Obviously I need to do some thinking, and that fast, seeing that it is due in a couple of days… Don’t panic.

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A closer look at Work and Text.

And so with Barthes it is not just random musings but something that weaves in and around ideas and propositions from contemporary literature, cinema, philosophy, anthropology, political theory and literary studies. He treats the writing as open propositions and things for you (the reader) to think with, alongside the writing. Here his writing is not a reporting of what he knows, but a discovering which happens in and with and inside of (amongst and together with) the writing.

 

This paragraph is from the IMblog on the chapter “From Work to Text” by Roland Barthes, and once again I get a feeling that this course is not only about learning what’s in the course guide, but understanding more about life in general. It is about being aware of the things you do, realising why you do them, and how they are situated in this web of chaos that we call The World.

Barthes has 7 different points that shows the position of the Text (in comparison to works, but also looking at is a unique thing). I will briefly go through the points and try to get something useful out of it.

1. The Text is not to be thought of as an object that can be computed. He stresses that it is pointless to try to separate out materially works from text. The difference between the two is that “the work is a fragment of substance”, which means it is a small part of a certain space, like books (in a library, a bookstore, etc), while the Text is a methodological field. Methodological means “a system of methods used in a particular area of study or activity”.
Barthes compares the opposition between text and work with Lacan’s distinction between ‘reality’ and ‘the real’; the one is displayed, the other is demonstrated.
So, while the work is a physical object and can be seen, the text “is a progress of demonstration, speaks according to certain rules (or against certain rules). The text exists in language, and only exists in the act of communication.

This is what Adrian described on the IMblog. Barthes wants us to look at the opportunities in writing, how to think alongside writing (and reading).

The text is experienced only in an activity of production. Hmm, sounds familiar doesn’t it? This is so related to the term “making do” that it almost makes me laugh. in the blogpost i did on the de Certeau reading, which was inspired y the lecture explaining it, Adrian said that things are only real in the act of making/doing. If I have an idea for a film, it doesn’t exist until it’s written down, or I’m actually filming it.

2. You can’t have a hierarchy when it comes to Text. It has a subversive force in respect of the old classification.

“If the text poses problems of classification (which is furthermore one of its ‘social’ functions), this is because it always involves a certain experience of Unfits.”

What he means by Unfits is (I think) limit-works. The text is that which goes to the limit of the rules of enunciation.
The Text is always paradoxial.

3. The Text can be approached, experienced, in reaction to the sign. The work closes on a signified. 

Just a quick update for everyone who isn’t a hundred percent confident in their knowledge regarding semiotics.

      • a ‘signifier’ (signifiant) – the form which the sign takes; and
      • the ‘signified’ (signifié) – the concept it represents.

The sign is the whole that results from the association of the signifier with the signified. The relationship between the signifier and the signified is referred to as ‘signification’, and this is represented in the Saussurean diagram by the arrows. The horizontal line marking the two elements of the sign is referred to as ‘the bar’.

If we take a linguistic example, the word ‘Open’ (when it is invested with meaning by someone who encounters it on a shop doorway) is a sign consisting of:
- a signifier: the word open
- a signified concept: that the shop is open for business.

To be honest, I still don’t get what Barthes means. Please help Adrian.

Barthes is telling us (with all his big words) that the logic around a Text is not comprehensive, but metonymic, which means

the substitution of the name of an attribute or adjunct for that of the thing meant, for example suit for business executive, or the track for horse racing

So, if the work closes on the signified, does this mean that the work is a clear representation for a certain thing? It is what it is, no more? We can therefore label it.

And then the text, which can be approached as the Sign, is a combination of different elements, and not one specific thing. Since the sign is the whole that results from the association of the signifier with the signified, the text can be thought of as something that changes with the interpretation of the reader. Please correct me if this is completely wrong..

4. The text is plural.

So my idea of statement number 3 is confirmed, but also proved wrong. Barthes writes that calling the text plural doesn’t just mean that it has several meanings, it accomplishes the very plural of meaning. A plural that is impossible to reduce. It doesn’t answer to interpretation, but a dissemination (something spreading widely). The plural of the text depends on stereographic plurality (stereography means the depiction or representation of three-dimensional things by projection onto a two-dimensional surface). 

The way I interpret this is that a Text is able to evoke feelings and thoughts, even though it is on a two dimensional surface (a book, a screen).

Barthes goes on to say that every text is intertextual, but that there is no point in trying to find the origin of the text. Citations are not there to show you the sources and influences of the work, they are anonymous, untraceable, and already read. 

5. The work is caught up in a process of filiation. This means that the work is always seen as connected to something. The author, history, etc. A determination of the work of the world, hence it it a specific work which has a specific function.

The Text on the other hand, functions without the presence of the author.
Barthes offers a metaphor: The Work can be seen as an organism, which grows by vital expansion, while the Text is a network. “If the text extends itself, it is as a result of a combinatory systematic (an image, moreover, close to current biological conceptions of the living beings).”

6. The text decants the work: 

The work is the object of consumption, it is made for the consumer culture. Here I’m again thinking back to Adrians idea about how producers look at us as passive consumers.

The Text decants the work from its consumption and gathers it up as play, activity, production, practice.

 

Bingo. The Text allows us to MAKE DO. Like in the post I wrote on The Death of The Author, Barthes mentions how the Text tries to make us diminish the distance between writing and reading. Not to make the reader superior, but to join them in a single signifying practice.

Lets look at what Barthes means by PLAY. He stated that reading works, here in a sense of consuming, isn’t even close to the play the text engages us in.

The text itself plays (like a door, like a machine with ‘play’) and the reader plays twice over, playing the Text as one plays a game, looking for a practice which re-produces it, but, in order that that practice not be reduced to a passive, inner mimesis (the Text is exactly that which resists such reduction), also playing the Text in the musical sense of the term.

 

7. Final approach to the Text. 

PLEASURE

Works make it impossible to produce something new from the material. You can find pleasure in some works, but it is still a pleasure of consumption, of being lead in a direction without the ability to imagine a different way. It cuts you off the production of these works.

The text is bound to a pleasure without separation. The Text is that space where no language has a hold over any other, where languages circulate.

 

I know this blogpost is way to long, and that no one is going to read it, but at least I understand the reading a little better. 

 

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LAZY

I was going to write more about some of the topics mentioned in today’s lecture, at least write my notes out a bit.. But I don’t have time at the moment, so I’ll just copy paste straight into here and try to do more on it later.

Concept of the idea hypertext very new; 60 years old.
Vannanar Bush’s MEMEX. Electronic archive. Different text with a censor that controls and shows. Being able to navigate between two text.

We think in a hypertextual fashion. Not linear, we jump all over the place. Pushes ideas that got an internet engineer, ted nelson to. Non Sequential writing. Docuverse. What the internet would be. The xanadu? Orson Welles Citizen Cane. Constantly anxious, unfinished, incomplete, as the internet.

No interest in technology, he likes literature and literary theory, professor of art history and English literature. Landow embraced hypertext. Not from technology background but area is the Victorian era. Looking at internet from an historical viewpoint. Comes at it at different perspective: antrophilogical, sociological, psychological etc. Assumes that the reader understand

What is hypertext doing to text?

Rosetta stone. Anchient Egypt. 2100 years old. Found 1799. Crucially important. Displayed three texts. Egyptian hieroglyphics, Demotic (anchient greek, Egyptian), and then anchient Greek.

This document allowed people to understant hieroglyphs.

Some kind of hypertext, translate button. Carved in rock, so linear.

600 years ago, a bible. Printed. Gutenberg 100 years after. Books were printed by munks, copying bibles. Didn’t know how to read, but copied it from what it looked like. Nature of text: ink was a certain recipe. Higher priest would check the bible, if there were three mistaked in the bible (a missing dot, etc) the whole bible were thrown away. As a monk you might copy one bible in your life. Text has authority and weight. Hypertext dramatically different. Text always been static. Stabelising of truth. If its on paper, it is true. All history written down, memory is lost.
hypertext: whole history of philosophy is at state because it is changing the language. Authority is different in those texts. Landow approaches with post-structualistic view.

Structualism era around the 50’ 60’ of thinking that human culture could be understood by the means of structure. Technical structure. Unconscious structures like a language. Life hinged on Grand Narratives. The way world is structured. History goes in a single line.

Post-structualist: Roland Barthes. Rejects the idea that a text has a single meaning, history is written by the winners. A million other stories that were not told. Every different reader creates his own history from it. Multiple perspectives, points of view.
Jacks Davida, Roland Barthes. Rejecting traditional notions of interpreting the world by text. Wanted to look at the world in different perspective.
birth of the reader. Thoughts of reading, how you interpret it, the reader makes the meaning, is part of “writing it”. Readers personal background, politics, etc plays in. Death of the authors, Shift in the narrative by being told by authorities, its just as important what happens in the head of the reader. He takes an active role.

Hypertext: Barthes idea come to life. What happens? Text are open, not closed.

Opens up inside, can go anywhere else. No longer specific books, any book on internet are part of a gigantic book called the internet. Implication of this is that it is no borders. Pages intersperse. Changes the way we think.

Intertextuality is an idea of the way text influences each other. Simpson, passing reference to other popular culture.
Family Guy, South Park.
Destroys hierarchy, it is all mixed up. Mess of possibilities, a party of meanings. Another implication is that it brings in the marginal. Anyone can be linked to a main text. A whole lot of bloggers talking about it and linking to it. Different voices, marginal voices are just as present as academic. Hypertext in other words, the centre is what each of us makes it. Multi linear fasit to it. We make our own path to it, like in the world. The way we live our life. Choises.

Hypertextual notion interpretet in different way. www.theyrule.net
Allows you to find different things and investigate? Chubby directors are linked to other boards. Purpose: shows how connected the world is. Not single linear narrative, the world works in a hypertextual way. Visualise how you are connected; tied together through strings. FIND ART FROM HUGH. Analoge art map. Visual, analog form of social networking.

Interlinking part of our nature now. Google crates hyperlinks for you.

Military version of internet; they developed the first one, it wasn’t safe enough so they gave it to us, created a new one. Person behind it, downloaded a whole load of files called it lady gaga. Sent it to Julian Assange. Took it to the press, couldn’t handle it only by himself. All donated some reporters, but still to much. Got a computer technician, structure it.

The trick was to use unusual, but off the wall. Put in batman gave two results? Was no hyperlink, but they created it. Bringing in different voices. Landows article still up to date, still relevant. They become part of our life. We take hyperlink for granted. What is it? What is it doing to the way we experience work? What about the munks? The authorities of text. What is the context of your hypertext essay? What can you link to it, what is it about, what does it mean?

 

Ok, this doesn’t make ANY sense for anyone but me.. To bad.

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