Open AccessBook
Discourse networks 1800/1900
Friedrich A. Kittler,Michael Metteer,Chris Cullens,David E. Wellbery +3 more
- 01 Jan 1990
657
TL;DR: In this paper, the mother's mouth and language channels were used as a metaphor for the great Lalula and Rebus, respectively, and the toast was used to describe the sacrifice of the Queen's sacrifice.
read more
Abstract: Foreword Part I. 1800: 1. The mother's mouth 2. language channels 3. The toast Part II. 1900: 4. The great Lalula 5. Rebus 6. Queen's sacrifice Afterword to the second printing Notes Index of persons.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Discourses of Danger: Locating Emma Goldman
TL;DR: Goldman's bold confrontations with authorities constituted a kind of anarchist parrhesia, fearless speech, a relentless truth-telling practice that risked her own security in pursuit of her “beautiful ideal.” The labor of remembering America's history of class violence hones our attention to the complex discursive processes by which some historical facts come to count in prevailing narratives, while others fade into obscurity as mentioned in this paper.
4
Unlocking the digital crypt: Exploring a framework for cryptographic reading and writing
TL;DR: It is argued that much of this transition is due to the shift towards cryptographic writing and concluded that cryptographic writing performs an ordering role in the authors' control society.
Donald Barthelme and the Emergence of the Dynamic Page
TL;DR: The dynamic page has emerged as the basis for contemporary reading in an electronic environment as discussed by the authors, and Barthelme's fiction explores many of the narrative issues raised by the dynamic page even before the widespread adoption of electronic textuality and graphical user interfaces.
4
Queer Practices, Queer Rhetoric, Queer Technologies: Studies of Digital Performativity in Gendered Network Culture
Gerald Jackson
- 01 Jan 2017
TL;DR: Computer technology, however, is not, and at some point the erasure of distinction between execution and code grounds itself in the mastery of the totality of computation.
Technologies of forgetting: phonographs, lyric voice, and Rossetti's woodspurge
TL;DR: The phonograph was prefigured in the literary culture of the nineteenth century as discussed by the authors, and this prefiguration can be traced back to the use of the phonograph as a metaphor for the voice of presence in poetry.
4