Joca/synopsis-20182401

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki
Revision as of 23:18, 22 January 2018 by Joca (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Source text == copied Liu, Lydia H. “ISpace: Printed English after Joyce, Shannon, and Derrida.” Critical Inquiry, vol. 32, no. 3, 2006, pp. 516–550. JSTOR, JSTOR, w...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Source text

copied Liu, Lydia H. “ISpace: Printed English after Joyce, Shannon, and Derrida.” Critical Inquiry, vol. 32, no. 3, 2006, pp. 516–550. JSTOR, JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/505377.

Raw notes

What is it saying (thesis)? Finding an understanding the function and nature of the phonetic alphabet and alphabetical writing. In the process focusing on the confluences between literature and technoscience, with Finnegans Wake of James Joyce as a starting point.

iSpace

Phonemics

Discusses various writers and engineers, from the Perspective of Joyce.

Derrida: Coined the term archiwriting. The relation between speech and writing changed with the universal Turing machine. Printed word and letters as a starting point

Theal: Joyce saw the work as a machine. A piece of engineering, especially communication engineering. Bringing statistical properties of letter sequences and spaces among words and non-words to light.

Literary experiment two decades before Shannon’s printed English

Contrast to Derrida, Joyce thought that the structures used in FW is meant to result in natural language. Any natural language was construed by the reader. Similar to how computers work, in the sense that they use symbolic symbols.

Letter sequences not made to be pronounced, but to visualize a certain meaning. Chute, fall.

Irrelevance of the phonetic aspect of text. Having a bigger focus on the ideographic and graphic part.

Developments in computing took these experiments to a new level.

-- Liu discusses Printed English by Shannon Shannon

Mathematical theory of communication

Approach of English as a statistical system. Printed English not about reproducing text, but having an interface between natural language and machine language.

27 letter alphabet

Rethinking idea of communication

Different look than Joyce. Not symbolic view, but statistical structure. What they have in common: not really presence of these roles in any linguistic way.

Markoff chain, using the probability of certain letter sequences as an information source.

Introduces concepts as information entropy and redundancy

FW low redundancy

Basic English high redundancy

Shannon not interested in semantic aspect of English, but in stochastic structure.

Ogden. Basic English

Shannon -> making writing a form of counting, generate text based on statistics

The space is a conceptual figure. Not a visible word divider as used in some other languages, no linguastic meaning but a ideographic role

Predictabiity of English more dependent on the space than on any of the other letters.

By its focus on probability of letter sequences, each language can be seen as a variant of printed English with just a different set of probabilities.

Shannon was not the first one. Ogden basic english -> statistical basis for universal and international language.

Language as a tool to build influence, in which this simplified language was more pratical. But not only reason to Ogden: stable basis for scientific research. English was the only language analyzed well enough to simplicy it in a good way.

Ogden saw BASIC as a printed language, foreseeing new ways of communication. Did not see how Turing and Shannon would use language.

Turing machine: letters as an interface, but phonemes and words were not required for communication by a computer. Use of printed symbols to allow a machine to write reade etc.

Ideograph to the machine

Typesetting not important anymore. Discrete symbols were used

What is its conclusion? Concluding: information theory outcome of crossbreeding the ideas in the literary world and scientific experiments,

What is your opinion? Article connects many practitioners in this field. On one hand complicated, because many references to for me new authors. On the other hand, invites to read others. Building framework. Not sure if James Joyce should be the starting point for this framework though.