fragmentation

By Hannah Ackermans, 28 November, 2018
Language
Year
Record Status
Abstract (in English)

This paper explores the concept of narrativity throughout space by analyzing the distributed novel Implementation (Rettberg and Montfort 2012). Distributed narratives are literary texts that are distributed across different spaces and times to create divergence rather than unity (Walker 1). Implementation consists of 240 stickers with text fragments and people are invited to put up stickers in a place of their choice on public surfaces. The stickers could then be photographed and added to the project website.The practice of putting up the stickers highly influences the way in which the actor views the space, connecting elements in the text fragment to elements in their surroundings. The actor who places the sticker might not have noticed certain elements if it hadn't been for the text on the sticker. Once the sticker is placed in its context, the opposite occurs: the surroundings influences the reading of the narrative.This diffraction between narrative and space is highlighted by the act of photography and online collection, as the digital interface shows the immediate context of the sticker but makes the city as a whole invisible. For the 'analog' reader, however, the context of the whole city is highly visible as the sticker has to be found inside the city.  The combination of analog and digital practices of Implementation thus highlights the representation of the city as a visual practice. In this way, the city becomes part of the work and vice versa in both physical and digital settings.

This paper analyses the work by means of a new materialist "diffractive reading" (Barad and Haraway) between the narrative and its urban context. I propose to regard the urban space as a ‘text’ and read how this (con)text interacts with the narrative stickers. My paper will also outline future plans for empirical experiments Implementation. 

Creative Works referenced
Content type
Author
Year
Publisher
Language
ISBN
9780312655396
License
All Rights reserved
Record Status
Description (in English)

In many of these stories, which range in length from several words to over 20 pages, Davis approaches her subject - be it a situation, an emotion, a state of bring - with almost scientific interest. Their titles reflect this: The Fish, The Mouse, Mothers, What an Old Woman Will Wear, Lost Things. These are meticulous dissections, intricate descriptions of, say, what it means to be right, or of betrayal, or the relationship of a mother and daughter. But somehow she evokes more, she pulls the reader into the stories - and they are stories - and her endings, whether it be after one paragraph or many pages, are breathtaking. 

(Source: Review in The Short Review by Tania Hershman)

Screen shots
Image
Collected Stories of Lydia Davis cover
By Scott Rettberg, 9 February, 2015
Author
Year
Record Status
Abstract (in English)

This essay that consists from a number of self-contained segments looks at the phenomenon of Flash graphics on the Web that attracted a lot of creative energy in the last few years. More than just a result of a particular software / hardware situation (low bandwidth leading to the use of vector graphics), Flash aesthetics exemplifies cultural sensibility of a new generation. This generation does not care if their work is called art or design. This generation is no longer is interested in "media critique" which preoccupied media artists of the last two decades; instead it is engaged in software critique. This generation writes its own software code to create their own cultural systems, instead of using samples of commercial media. The result is the new modernism of data visualizations, vector nets, pixel-thin grids and arrows: Bauhaus design in the service of information design. Instead the Baroque assault of commercial media, Flash generation serves us the modernist aesthetics and rationality of software. Information design is used as tool to make sense of reality while programming becomes a tool of empowerment.

(Source: Author's abstract)

Description (in English)

SpeidiShow was LiveTweeting about an imaginary reality TV Show. It’s a creative social media game and a transmedia narrative that spanned Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and QuickenLoans. The project included a cast of barrel of writers including: Spencer Pratt, Heidi Montag, Cathy Podeszwa, Jean Sramek, Betsy Boyd, Skye McIlvaine-Jones, Davin Heckman, Jeff T. Johnson, Claire Donato, Ian Clarkson, Sarah-Anne Joulie, Chloe Smith. The logo was designed by Rick Valicenti, 3st, and the site was designed by Rob Wittig and Matt Olin. (Source: ELO Conference 2014)

Screen shots
Image
Image
Image
Content type
Year
Platform/Software
License
Public Domain
Record Status
Description (in English)

The reader finds, in the first level of reading a letter of Eugenia Vilasans, overlapped with a photography of her. The letter was written in 1926 and stayed hidden until she died, she confesses her adulturey in the letter. After this introduction a link invites to recompose her story, there are disorganised fragments. The image is a metaphor of the hypertext: postcards, newspapers cuts, pages from personal diaries of different dates, letters of the lover conforming the plot. It is an epistolary story that must be assembled like a puzzle.

Description (in original language)

El lector se encuentra, en un primer nivel de lectura con una carta de Eugenia Vilasans, que se superpone a una fotografía en sepia de ella. La carta fue escrita en 1926 y permaneció escondida hasta que muriera la autora, quien confiesa la historia de su adulterio. Después de esta introducción, un link invita a acudir al escritorio de Vilasans para recomponer la historia, en donde se exponen, a modo de papeles sueltos, los fragmentos dispersos. La imagen resulta una buena metáfora del hipertexto. Postales, recortes de periódicos, hojas de diarios personales con diferentes fechas, cartas del amante, conforman la trama. Un relato epistolar que debe ensamblarse con un puzzle.

Description in original language
Screen shots
Image
Description (in English)

This hypertext fiction presents three characters: Sofía, Mara and Carlos. Through a poetical language full of metaphors and philosophical thoughts the reader clicks on links to follow the fragmented and disorganized story. The story is incomplete and open to the reader's interpretation. Why Sofía wants to abandon her life? Mara and Carlos have a relationship but what is the relationship between Sofía and Carlos? Why are they so depressed when they think about the past? The readers must find the answers (Maya Zalbidea Paniagua)

Description (in original language)

Esta ficción hipertextual presenta tres personajes: Sofía, Mara y Carlos. A través de un lenguaje poético lleno de metáforas y pensamientos filosóficos el lector/a hace click en hipervínculos para poder seguir este fragmentado y desordenado relato. La historia está incompleta y abierta a las interpretaciones del lector o lectora. ¿Por qué Sofía quiere abandonar su vida? Mara y Carlos tienen una relación pero ¿cuál es la relación entre Sofía y Carlos? ¿Por qué se deprimen tanto cuando piensan en el pasado? Los lectores deben encontrar las respuestas (Maya Zalbidea Paniagua)

Screen shots
Image
Description (in English)

STRUTS is an algorithmic narrative collage created from a collection of fragments of facts and fictions pertaining to a place and its people, history, geography and storm events. Narrative resonates in the spaces between the texts horizontally scrolling across the screen, the flickering updating of monthly tide gauge averages, the occasional appearance of live weather weather warnings pulled in by RSS feed and the animated set of photographs of the ends of the struts that support the seawall that protectsa portion of foreshore from the rising tides of the Northumberland Strait. The photographs were taken on May 23, 2011 the second day of a five-week stint as Open Studio Artist in Residence at Struts Gallery and Faucet Media Lab, Sackville, New Brunswick, Canada, May 22 – June 26, 2011. The Saxby Gale of 1869 is the storm we compare all possible storms to. The tide gauge data represents the monthly tide gauge averages for Shediac Bay from the month I was born to the month I moved from Canada to England. The gauge that measured these averages was destroyed in the same storm surge that damaged the struts in the photographs, onl the night of 21 December 2010. The Tantramar Marsh text is excerpted from Writing Coastlines: The Operation of Estuaries, Islands and Beaches as Liminal Spaces in the Writings of Elizabeth Bishop, a paper written in residence at Struts and presented at "It Must Be Nova Scotia: Negotiating Place in the Writings of Elizabeth Bishop" which took place at University of King's College, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, June 10-12, 2011.

 

Pull Quotes

"These struts support the seawall that protects the foreshore in front of Linda Rae Dornan’s cottage from the Northumberland strait. The seawall was severely damaged 21 December 2010 during the third nor'easter in as many weeks. It was a full moon, and a lunar eclipse. Winds gusted to 100 kilometres an hour. The tide gauge at Charlottetown showed 3.494 metres above chart datum at 21:40. The tide gauge at Shediac was destroyed by the surge. Many STRUTS in Linda’s seawall were torn out or twisted. The holes were filled with stones. A rug was laid, covered with rip-rap and new soil, and seeded with grass. Boulders on the beach support the seawall now, thousands of dollars worth. The wall itself and the struts that support it are no longer visible."

STRUTS. STRUCTURAL MEMBERS, AS IN TRUSSES, PRIMARILY INTENDED TO RESIST LONGITUDINAL COMPRESSION. EMBANKMENTS MEANT TO PREVENT EROSION OF SHORELINES. BRACE OR SUPPORT BY MEANS OF STRUTS OR SPURS. SPURS. OBLIQUE REINFORCING PROPS OR STAYS OF TIMBER OR MASONRY. ON THE SPUR OF THE MOMENT. ON IMPULSE. SPURS TO ACTION. STRUTS. WALKS WITH HEAD ERECT AND CHEST THROWN OUT, AS IF EXPECTING TO IMPRESS OBSERVERS. WITH PROUD BEARING. PARADES, FLOURISHES. STRUTS AND SWAGGERS. STRUTS GALLERY. SUPPORTS BY MEANS OF STRUTS. STRUCTURAL MEMBERS SPUR STRUTS TO ART ACTION. WALKS WITH HEAD ERECT ALONG LONGITUDINAL EMBANKMENTS. SEAWALLS BRACED BY SPURS. STAYS. PREVENT EROSION. OF MOMENTS. OBLIQUELY.

Screen shots
Image
STRUTS, J. R. Carpenter, 2011
Image
STRUTS, J. R. Carpenter, 2011
Image
STRUTS, J. R. Carpenter, 2011
Image
STRUTS, J. R. Carpenter, 2011
Technical notes

STRUTS is composed in HTML, CSS and javascript. It is best viewed full screen. It requires an internet connection to run as one page element contains an RSS feed called by the Google API.

Content type
Author
Year
Language
Platform/Software
License
All Rights reserved
Record Status
Description (in English)

Through motifs of mothering, distance and intimacy, geography and labyrinths, art and writing, nuns and priests, the moon, and sexuality, Quibbling recreates the experience of writing, of assembling a story from fragments of the experience, connecting this empowering process of assembly with the process by which we assemble ourselves and our lives. What at first may seem purposely fragmented is actually as continuous and cohesive as any given time period in a person's life.

(Source: Eastgate catalog description)