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Showing posts with label graphic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label graphic. Show all posts

Tuesday

Graphic expression


Recognising the specificity of writing, glossematics did not merely give itself the means of describing the graphic element.

It showed bow to reach the literary element, to what in literature passes through an irreducibly graphic text, tying the play of form to a determined substance of expression. If there is something in literature which does not allow itself to be reduced to the voice, to epos or to poetry, one cannot recapture it except by rigorously isolating the bond that links the play of form to the substance of graphic expression. (It will by the same token be seen that “pure literature,” thus respected in its irreducibilty, also risks limiting the play, restricting it. The desire to restrict play is, moreover, irresistible.)
This interest in literature is effectively manifested in the Copenhagen School. It thus removes the Rousseauist and Saussurian caution with regard to literary arts. It radicalises the efforts of the Russian formalists, specifically of the O.PO.IAZ, who, in their attention to the being-literary of literature, perhaps favoured the phonological instance and the literary models that it dominates.
Notably poetry. That which, within the history of literature and in the structure of a literary text in general, escapes that framework, merits a type of description whose norms and conditions of possibility glossematics has perhaps better isolated. It has perhaps thus better prepared itself to study the purely graphic stratum within the structure of the literary text within the history of the becoming-literary of literality, notably in its “modernity.”

- See the journal French Metablog with today different posts - Jean-Philippe Pastor




Friday

Links you don't know



Within text, some links highlight a key phrase, others a verb, and many prefer the very literal, "for such-and-such an article go here," with the "here" being the blue, underlined, linking word.

Still others prefer that links live within graphic elements: a picture, a drawing, a logo. Sometimes you don't know where a link is until you roll your mouse over the spot.


Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts

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PHONEREADER Library - - Jean-Philippe Pastor

Thursday

Hypertextual ambigram

Graphic artists use ambigrams because of their unique symmetry.

Ambigrams thus appear in commercial logos, covers of books and music albums, and tattoo designs. Ambigrams feature prominently in Dan Brown's novel, Angels and Demons, of which the first UK release featured an ambigram of the title on the cover. The ambigrams in the novel were designed by graphic artist John Langdon. Since the release of the bestseller sequel The Da Vinci Code, there has been a marked increase in the popularity and awareness of ambigrams, leading to a reprint of John Langdon's book on ambigrams entitled Wordplay. The following ambigram examples all have rotational symmetry, unless otherwise noted.

Abarat, on the cover of the book by Clive Barker
Angels and Demons, on the cover of the first edition of Angels and Demons by Dan Brown, as well as the Illuminati brands in the text
GEB (3-dimensional ambigram), on the cover of Gödel, Escher, Bach by Douglas Hofstadter
Justin Thyme, on the cover of Justin Thyme by Panama Oxridge
Wordplay, on the cover of John Langdon's book on ambigrams. The author's name also appears on the cover as an ambigram.

See that post with different algorithms in metabole
See the journal French Metablog with today different posts
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Saturday

Over the spot


Within text, some links highlight a key phrase, others a verb, and many prefer the very literal, "for such-and-such an article go here," with the "here" being the blue, underlined, linking word. Still others prefer that links live within graphic elements: a picture, a drawing, a logo. Sometimes you don't know where a link is until you roll your mouse over the spot.

Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/
See that post with different algorithms in metabole
See the journal French Metablog with today different posts