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==Prototyping== | ==Prototyping== | ||
* Exploratory Programming for the Arts and Humanities notebooks for chapters 4,5,6,7,8,15 | |||
* Natural Language Processing with Python notebooks for chapters 1,2 | |||
==Reading Writing and Reasearch Methodologies== | ==Reading Writing and Reasearch Methodologies== | ||
=== Anotating the Intro of Queer Phenomenology=== | === Anotating the Intro of Queer Phenomenology=== |
Revision as of 10:08, 22 March 2022
First approaches to vernacular and language processing
Special Issue #16
Texts to discuss *
My translation of the lyrics of a greek partisan song and the lyrics of a queer take on the same song
Experiental narrations 5 occupants of Peiraiki-Patraiki factory in 1990*
Experiental map of Panayotis' narratives*
Prototyping
- Exploratory Programming for the Arts and Humanities notebooks for chapters 4,5,6,7,8,15
- Natural Language Processing with Python notebooks for chapters 1,2
Reading Writing and Reasearch Methodologies
Anotating the Intro of Queer Phenomenology
with Carmen, Chae and Miriam in Steve's Class
Discussing the text with chae in an experiental approach, having just arrived in Rotterdam and trying to orientate in a very different context.
Trying to read the text through our experiences
queer phenomenology annotation pad
Glossary of Interconnected Keywords
with Chae, Kimberley and Jian
Collective experiment on giving our definitions to keywords that are inteconnected to each other.
glossary of interconnected keywords
Collaboration, Conflict & Consent workshop
https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/Mitsa_selfportrait
The forced poetics and the making of Special Issue 16
really inspired by Clara's lecture on vernacular design and forced poetics
publishing is a validation
conversation with Carmen and Erica
conversation and diagrams with Erica about forced poetics and empowerment
...and I wish that your question has been answered
This is an act of persistent resistance. We created a few functions to facilitate an iterative process of refusal towards PM Kryakos Mitsotakis and PM Mark Rutte's answers during a Press Conference and any of their possible versions. We invite you to play as much as you want with these functions and create your own answers as counter-reaction to Mark Rutte's final sentence: "So this is my answer and I wish that your question has been answered". Every new answer, every new iteration, can be submitted to our Archive of Repetitive Answers. Although they will never be good enough, nor shall they be accepted as exhaustive, we consider the modified answers as a trigger for a never-ending dialogue.
Our tool is a filter to process and alter texts. By targeting specific words and replacing them, either for another word, for specific characters or for blank spaces, the reader or user of the tool can change the text in many ways. The tool includes three functions The function “respell” receives as input a text (string type) and substitute all the occurrences of a target word with a replacement chosen by the user. The function “stitch” is very similar to the previous one but replaces all the occurrences of a target word with a single character (it can also be a blank space) that is repeated as many times as the length of the target. The third function “reveal” also works very similar but deletes all input text except the target word(s) and replaces the deleted text with blank spaces.