Quilt INC./Monster: Difference between revisions

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki
(Created page with "you will see in this text that i became confused by the idea of the monster during the writing/reading. When objects refuse to be , and is it the object that does the refusal, or the communities of practice involved?, naturalized, they become monsters. However, cyborg, a subset of monsters, consider borderlands their naturalized home. Meaning an unnaturalized object feeling at home (naturalized) → infinite loop of monster cyborgs? question: is it really the monster t...")
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
you will see in this text that i became confused by the idea of the monster during the writing/reading.
You will see in this text that I became confused by the idea of the monster during the writing/reading.


When objects refuse to be , and is it the object that does the refusal, or the communities of practice involved?, naturalized, they become monsters. However, cyborg, a subset of monsters, consider borderlands their naturalized home. Meaning an unnaturalized object feeling at home (naturalized) → infinite loop of monster cyborgs?
When objects refuse to be , and is it the object that does the refusal, or the communities of practice involved?, naturalized, they become monsters. However, cyborg, a subset of monsters, consider borderlands their naturalized home. Meaning an unnaturalized object feeling at home (naturalized) → infinite loop of monster cyborgs?

Revision as of 17:13, 31 January 2024

You will see in this text that I became confused by the idea of the monster during the writing/reading.

When objects refuse to be , and is it the object that does the refusal, or the communities of practice involved?, naturalized, they become monsters. However, cyborg, a subset of monsters, consider borderlands their naturalized home. Meaning an unnaturalized object feeling at home (naturalized) → infinite loop of monster cyborgs?

question: is it really the monster that doesnt want to be naturalized? Or are it the various communities of practice that do not create a welcoming environment?