The Context of Contest

There is for me a very interesting accidental in the text of “Film as Dialogical Art: Bakhtin, Pragmatics and Film Criticism” by Janina Falkowska a paper presented at the 1991 “Interaction in Process” Colloquium of Comparative Literature in Canada and published in Volume XXII Number 2 (Fall 1992) of Comparative Literature in Canada – La Literature Comparée au Canada edited by Joyce Gogin. This is the bit that interests me:

The dialogical nature of Bakhtin’s concept of Word can be compared to a pragmatic understanding of the communication act with its sender, receiver, message and contest [sic].

One first believes that “contest” has been substituted for “context” and overlooked in the usual reliance on automated spellcheckers. But the passage continues and raises the spectre of struggle.

Bakhtin’s model seems to extend this concept beyond the rigorous perception of the communication act as existing in an actual speech situation. In its most general terms, the dialogic views language as social practice, as the struggle between language systems within a particular socio-historic context. To enter that struggle as a language user means to engage in speech as citation, for any linguistic utterance involves the adoption of, as well as the response to, prior speech. Speech as interlocution becomes an ideological form which both reveals and produces the subject’s position within a social system.

Leads me to pose the question of what type dialogical situation exists when the very context is contested.

And so for day 1823
10.12.2011

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The R i c h :: The P o o r

The title is mathematically inspired: Peano Curves and Cantor Dust. Infinite occupations of space and infinite recursive reductions. But its tone is political.

Peano Curves and Cantor Dust

I ride the subway
The rich do not

I frequent the delicatessen
The rich do not
The caterer makes a house
call with a set of delectable samples

I ride the subway
The poor do not
They walk blocks and blocks
through slush in sneakers
lined with plastic bags to reach a food bank, a soup kitchen, a place of rest.

I had originally posted this as an index.html file to a subdirectory to offer to anyone who would truncate a url to see something unexpected. http://homes.chass.utoronto.ca/~lachance/portfolio/ Time to bring it out of the shadows. And apply a transformation to some key words. A translation, if you will.

f o o d   s o u p   r e s t


f   o   o   d     s   o   u   p     r   e   s   t


f     o     o     d       s     o     u     p       r     e     s     t



And so for day 1822
09.12.2011

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Number One Advice for Living a Writing Life

His first tip for aspiring novelists:

One: work every day. Get into the habit of it. Work, when you don’t feel like it, when you’ve just broken up with your girlfriend or boyfriend, when you’re feeling ill, when you’ve got homework to do. Put your work first. Habit is your greatest ally. Get into the habit of writing when you’re young and it’ll stay with you. Sixteen is a very good age to start.

Philip Pullman
Philip Pullman: a life in writing The Guardian, March 3, 2011.

And so for day 1821
08.12.2011

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Agency Located

A question and answer that arose in contemplating Doležel‘s work on possible worlds and fiction.

Q. What is between the universe and the world?

A. Agents

But how does an “agent” arise? A fold in the fabric of the universe …

And so for day 1820
07.12.2011

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Erosion Erased

one of those small slips of paper containing a line i can’t quite trace

the landscape
never left off
leaving its traces

mine? another’s? ours?

And so for day 1819
06.12.2011

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Coping with Copying

Pick your adventure.

re (coop) eration
re (coup) eration

Recuperating from a transcription error?

And so for day 1818
05.12.2011

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A Dearth of Photocopiers

Mario Livio recounts this episode in the life of Évariste Galois. It strikes me as possible only at a time when paper was expensive and the making of copies labour-intensive.

In June 1829, the Academy of Sciences announced the establishment of a new Grand Prix for Mathematics. […] The work was entered in February 1830, shortly before the March 1 deadline. […] For reasons that are not entirely clear, the academy’s secretary, Fourier, took the manuscript home. He died on May 16, and the manuscript was never recovered among his papers. Consequently, entirely unbeknownst to Galois, his entry was never even considered for the prize. […] You can imagine Galois’s anger when he learned eventually that his own manuscript had been lost. The paranoid young man was now convinced that all the forces of mediocrity had untied to deny him a well-deserved repute.

The Equation That Couldn’t be Solved: How Mathematical Genius Discovered the Language of Symmetry

And so for day 1817
04.12.2011

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They, The Other Gender

I always thought “one” was a lovely gender neutral word to cover either “he” or “she”. Others have taken to using singular “they” (which has support from grammarians going way back). Others use gender free pronouns such as “hir”.

Why not import?

I am brought to this question by a poem by Bänoo Zan which begins “Bitter dark / my hair” and ends

Ou has always
liked
esh coffee.

With a note indicating that “ou” is the third person non-gender specific pronoun in Persian and “esh” is the third person singular non-gender specific pronoun.

The full poem appears in From the Root Zine Issue #1 ::hair::

And so for day 1816
03.12.2011

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On the Nature of Polls

Charles Bernstein

What seems to be discouraged in American politics is any active participation in the designation and description of public policy issues — a ceding of authority that politicians, journalists, and the public are forced to accept if they are to play the political roles to which they seem to have been assigned. The poll remains the most conspicuous example of this disenfranchising process, for polls elicit binary reactions to always-already articulated policies — a stark contrast to proactive political participation that entails involvement in formulating these policies — including formulating the way they are represented.

A Poetics (Harvard University Press, 1992)

And so for day 1815
02.12.2011

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Situatedness

Ian Gold and Suparna Choudhury
“Losing Our Heads”
Literary Review of Canada

Contemporary neuroscience is what the brain looks like through a keyhole. It is the science of the brain in isolation. The brain, however, is not isolated; it is situated. It lives in an environment-first and foremost, in a body, as well as in a physical, social and cultural milieu — and this environment matters to our understanding of what the brain does. A full description of brain function, therefore, will have to be an expansive one that includes neuroscience as well as a characterization of those features of the world — especially the social world — that matter most to the working brain.

http://reviewcanada.ca/magazine/2016/12/losing-our-heads/

And so for day 1814
01.12.2011

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