User:Aitantv/ABC: Difference between revisions
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An animated video prototype where five participants recite versions of the alphabet. As the video proceeds the alphabets form a polyphonic register shifting in and out of time. | An animated video prototype where five participants recite versions of the alphabet. As the video proceeds the alphabets form a polyphonic register shifting in and out of time. | ||
<span style="color: black; ext-decoration:none; background-color: #FFF300; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;" >''[[User:Aitantv/Camera|v e r s i o n 1]]''</span> | |||
{{vimeo|637236770}} | {{vimeo|637236770}} | ||
Echos of one alphabet ricochet into another. I'm interested in the power dynamics between | |||
<span style="color: black; ext-decoration:none; background-color: #FFF300; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;" >''[[User:Aitantv/Camera|v e r s i o n 2]]''</span> | |||
{{vimeo|639141182}} | |||
Echos of one alphabet ricochet into another. I'm interested in the power dynamics within and between languages. Notably participants in this experiment struggled to remember their first alphabet, learning it again through their utterances. Does one's Mother tongue begin to fade? How does a language change our thinking patterns? As Samuel Delany's Babel 17 asserts, language is a weapon. See <span style="color: black; ext-decoration:none; background-color: #FFF300; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;" >''[[User:Aitantv/Interview|i n t e r v i e w]]''</span> for further discussion. |
Latest revision as of 16:07, 26 October 2021
ABC (2021)
An animated video prototype where five participants recite versions of the alphabet. As the video proceeds the alphabets form a polyphonic register shifting in and out of time.
Echos of one alphabet ricochet into another. I'm interested in the power dynamics within and between languages. Notably participants in this experiment struggled to remember their first alphabet, learning it again through their utterances. Does one's Mother tongue begin to fade? How does a language change our thinking patterns? As Samuel Delany's Babel 17 asserts, language is a weapon. See i n t e r v i e w for further discussion.