miércoles, 27 de febrero de 2019

sobre el lenguaje

 "The technique of art is to make objectsunfamiliar, to make forms difficult, to increase the difficulty and length of perception because the process of perception is an aesthetic end in itself and must be prolonged."

http://collection.eliterature.org/1/

the ready-made text, the mannerist text, the illegible text, and the unauthored text.-conceptual poetry

keneth goldsmith 'uncreative reading"
 “Soliloquy,” in 1997, he recorded every word he spoke for a week. He printed the words on pages and pasted them to the walls of a gallery. They covered the walls from floor to ceiling. “You were supposed to drown in my words, but the piece was a failure,” he said. “Fidget,” which is an account of practically every movement he made on Bloomsday—June 16th—in 1997. (Goldsmith deeply admires Joyce and has read “Ulysses” several times.) “Fidget” begins with Goldsmith waking up: “Eyelids open. Tongue runs across upper lip moving from left side of mouth to right following arc of lip. Swallow.”
Day,” the book for which he is probably best known. A strict work of appropriation, “Day” is a typed copy of the edition of the Timesfor September 1, 2000. 
“Context is the new content,” he writes in “Uncreative Writing,” his collection of essays on conceptual writing. “How I make my way through this thicket of information—how I manage it, how I parse it, how I organize and distribute it—is what distinguishes my writing from yours.”

Founded in 1960 by French mathematician Francois de Lionnais and writer Raymond Queneau, Ouvroir de Litterature Potentielle (OULIPO), or Workshop of Potential Literature, investigates the possibilities of verse written under a system of structural constraints. 


ready made text- apropiacion
visual text más valor a la imagen
computer text auto generado

técnicas:
n+ 7 oulipo
dada poem
caligrama
escritura automatizada surrealismo
bots

https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/text/brief-guide-oulipo
https://owlcation.com/academia/Try-Oulipo-and-No-More-Writers-Block
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/10/05/something-borrowed-wilkinson
http://www.ubu.com/concept/
http://popcorcoranpoetry.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2016-03-24T10:56:00-07:00&max-results=12

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