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=== [[User:)biyibiyibiyi(/grad_project/wangzhen|w Childhood friend Wang Zhen ]]=== | === [[User:)biyibiyibiyi(/grad_project/wangzhen|w Childhood friend Wang Zhen ]]=== | ||
=== w encountered high school seller Xuan Xuan=== | === w encountered high school seller Xuan Xuan=== |
Revision as of 17:31, 11 May 2020
Repeater | fù dú jī | 复读机 | Archive
Introduction
The archive surrounds the narrative of the repeater, a device used in China since the 90s, predominantly for learning English. It was invented by a telecommunications engineer in his forties to learn English, since folks at his age learned Russian in school. The device quickly became phenomenal, and radically changed how language learning is perceived and conducted.
This device commenced and accompanied the my English learning career. It is a tool of disembodiment. Students were tortured and frustrated from repeating from tape recordings out of everyday context; at the same time the device was a tool for advancement and mobility during the country's then radically transformative years.
Several methods and schools of thought inform my project - the method of the anarchive, the field of media archaeology, and the study of sound. Today, the repeater, along with the pedagogy the device proposed, has gradually exited from the landscape of language learning. It is an object of media archaeological value. Talking to my friends from childhood, I collected interviews that will work as contextual narratives, on how the device took place in everyday living.
Starting out: Collecting spoken interviews
Intentionally, I want to approach the archive from a departure of intimacy. To start out to work comfortably with voice and speech, I conducted only two interviews. One from my childhood friend, and another with a girl I encountered purely by accident.
w Childhood friend Wang Zhen
w encountered high school seller Xuan Xuan
It's much worthwhile to look for repeaters on sale on Xianyu, a Chinese second hand exchange app, than to buy them new. The repeaters are phasing out but have not yet become precious collectibles.
On Xianyu, I become intrigued by how people are personifying their own repeaters with stickers. I looked for keywords "repeater" + "stickers", and one particular repeater stood out. It was decorated with playful stickers in the most extravagant way. I immediately put an order on it.
The repeater came with English tapes from Grade 9. I asked the seller if they are free. The seller said yes, and, out of expectation, encouraged me for me studies (by assuring me of the high school entrance exam). I've been mistaken as a final year middle school student.
The package was sent to my parents' house in China first, and they found a letter for me, written by the seller herself. It is a she, now a high school student living in Chongqing (SW city in China), whom the repeater held tremendous significance for. She wrote about her coming to age experience in the letter:
"Ever since growing up, I have been labelled as one of those “terrible” children. I was the ones who never finish their home work, never recited the texts, whenever my primary school pushed me, I procrastinate. I never committed disastrous mistakes, but full of small mis-behaviors. I was very naughty by nature. During class, my good friend is my badly damaged eraser; after class, I chat and gossiped with my good friends."
Her life changed when she discovered her motivation for learning English:
"I came to enjoy the feeling of speaking English. I started to catch up with my English fervently, as much as reciting word lists during break times and meals. I have to admit that the effort was partly driven by my wish to make it up for myself, but it was nonetheless effective."
Subculture Archive: Music Tape Library
Subculture Archive: Narratives Video
Subculture Archive: Stickers Library
During the conversation I had with Xuan Xuan, I asked her about her motivation for covering her repeater with stickers. I was didn't put stickers onto my repeaters when I used them, because I was less fond of the culture of stickers then, compared to now; during the recent resurrection of millennium subcultures and pop culture, I regret and wonder why I didn't devote myself to stickers at the time.
For Xuan Xuan, the pedagogy of repetition was a challenge for her, to endure repeating identical phrases times and times again. The stickers were motivational symbols.