XPUB2 projects Trim5 2020: Difference between revisions
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'''Simon Browne''' | '''Simon Browne''' | ||
''Project description'' | ''Project description'' | ||
The bootleg library is a particular, situated social infrastructure. It operates from the understanding that the library is a collection; a collection of the texts contained within it, and the readers collected around them. There is a reciprocal, self-reflexive relationship between the texts and the readers. A bootleg is a homage, an unauthorised copy of a source publication; and bootlegging a strategy by which texts acquire diversity, resisting singularity and representing readers. | The bootleg library is a particular, situated social infrastructure. It operates from the understanding that the library is a collection; a collection of the texts contained within it, and the readers collected around them. There is a reciprocal, self-reflexive relationship between the texts and the readers. A bootleg is a homage, an unauthorised copy of a source publication; and bootlegging a strategy by which texts acquire diversity, resisting singularity and representing readers.<br> | ||
''Links to relevant pages'' | ''Links to relevant pages'' | ||
[[User:Simon/bootleg library|* Overview of project]] | [[User:Simon/bootleg library|* Overview of project]]<br> | ||
[https://hub.xpub.nl/bootleglibrary/* the bootleg library] (please email info(at)simonbrowne.biz for the HTTP login) | [https://hub.xpub.nl/bootleglibrary/* the bootleg library] (please email info(at)simonbrowne.biz for the HTTP login)<br> | ||
''Focus of tutorial'' | ''Focus of tutorial'' | ||
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Revision as of 14:24, 2 April 2020
Link for Marina Otero Verzier & Annet Dekker
Simon Browne
Project description
The bootleg library is a particular, situated social infrastructure. It operates from the understanding that the library is a collection; a collection of the texts contained within it, and the readers collected around them. There is a reciprocal, self-reflexive relationship between the texts and the readers. A bootleg is a homage, an unauthorised copy of a source publication; and bootlegging a strategy by which texts acquire diversity, resisting singularity and representing readers.
Links to relevant pages
* Overview of project
the bootleg library (please email info(at)simonbrowne.biz for the HTTP login)
Focus of tutorial