page based poetry

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9781908058461
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All Rights reserved
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Description (in English)

"J.R. Carpenter draws language through the icy passage of code's style" Nick Montfort

An Ocean of Static transforms the dense, fragmented archive of the North Atlantic into an astonishing sea of fresh new text. From the late 15th century onwards, a flurry of voyages were made into the North Atlantic in search of fish, the fabled Northwest Passage, and beyond into the territories purely imaginary. Today, this vast expanse is crisscrossed with ocean and wind currents, submarine cables and wireless signals, seabirds and passengers, static and cargo ships.

In this long-awaited poetry debut by award-winning digital writer and artist J.R. Carpenter, cartographic and maritime vernaculars inflected with the syntax and grammar of ships logs and code languages splinter and pulse across the page. Haunting, politically charged and formally innovative, An Ocean of Static presents an ever-shifting array of variables. Amid global currents of melting sea ice and changing ocean currents Carpenter charts the elusive passages of women and of animals, of indigenous people and of migrants, of strange noises and of phantom islands.

This book is made of other books. The texts in this book are composed of facts, fictions, fragments, and codes collected from accounts of voyages undertaken over the past 2,340 years or so, into the North Atlantic, in search of the Northwest Passage, and beyond, into territories purely imaginary. The texts in this book are intended to be read on the page and to serve as scripts for the live performance of a body of web-based works. These texts retain traces of the syntax and grammar of code languages.

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J. R. Carpenter || An Ocean of Static, Penned in the Margins, 2018
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J. R. Carpenter || An Ocean of Static, Penned in the Margins, 2018
By David Devanny, 4 August, 2015
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Abstract (in English)

The primary aim of this paper is to identify some of the key structural elements of resistances to digital poetries, and emergent forms of resistance to digital poetries, exhibited in data collected from publishers associated with page-based poetry (Bohn) in Britain. This will start with analyses of interview texts from a spectrum of UK poetry publishers (collected as part of the first half of my PhD studies) with a particular attention paid to those newly developed modes of resistance to the digital, and the structure of organised and disorganised resistances. A guiding principle is that analysis of resistances, cultural hostility, and the negative spectrum of taste is often as revealing as that of the positive (Bourdieu). The relationship between these resistances and other statements of taste will be interrogated, their motives interpreted. These analyses will be used as a launchpad to raise wider questions about cultural authority, distinction and guardianship. More specifically stories of these resistances will be told through interrogating the interview texts with a variety of methods including commutation testing (Barthes), word frequency analysis, comparative literary methods of the script and through creative practice, including a number of digital performative texts (of which one or two short clips will be played). The subject of the research is the structures of resistance, where resistance is a broad spectrum form explicit statements of taste and intent, to implicit resistance i.e. changes to production models and publishing strategies. The paper directly engages with attempts to 'combat' the threat that digital poetry may (or may not) pose to the market share, primary function, and cultural significance of, the page-based print publication of poetry. The research is of use as an exploration of taste in contemporary poetry publishing, and in framing our changing understanding of the role of publishing. It raises questions about the future of digital poetries.