Monday, January 15, 2007

Semionautical Almanac (excerpt)

One doesn't want to freeze up language to soon. If you freeze language too soon you get stuck with a hypnotic living corpse. A dubious ice-man frozen spectacle, a sideshow or hoax. I wonder if the blobsquatch has done this--frozen my semionautical expedition in its tracks. Conceptual engineering of neologistic frameworks encourages semionautical expeditions into the unknown...i must stay the course! Rather than freezing up, the blobsquatchery lumbers on, glacially drifting. A slow-motion derive. “In a dérive one or more persons during a certain period drop their relations, their work and leisure activities, and all their other usual motives for movement and action, and let themselves be drawn by the attractions of the terrain and the encounters they find there,” writes Debord in a debrief on the derive (Debord , 1958)

This deviant engagement, which Guy Debord and his Situationist crew termed Psychogeography, sets its sights on the latent potential of urban landscapes, encouraging detours or detournement, of one’s everyday environment. The Situationists understood the derive as a means of excavating “unities of ambiance,” and effects which “"the geographical environment, consciously organized or not," had on "the emotions and behavior of individuals." Along with literal geographical impediments, one’s environment may be constricted along socio-economic contours which direct and homogenize one’s experience in a particular space. Terrain is textual in cyberspace, but as with the usual itineraries that move one through a city there exist subtexts, so to speak.

Similarly, the blobsquatch may be understood as an example of what Julian Bleecker calls a theory object, a term relayed by Bruce Sterling as "not just a mental idea or a word, but a cloud of associated commentary and data, that can be passed around from mouse to mouse, and linked-to... A Theory Object is a concept that's accreting attention, and generating visible, searchable, rankable, trackable trails of attention." (Sterling )

In cyberspace terrain is textual. A derive consists of neologisms. The neologistics of a psychogeographic information system. Neologisms as strategic or accidental misspellings. This is an opportunity to uncover missing links.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home