lexicon-scape : brunelleschi, lacan, le corbusier
5 December 2010
lexicon-scape :
brunelleschi, lacan, le corbusier
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| sadomasochism | instantaniety | primacy |
| interceded | predicated | glitches |
| dialogic | clandestine | colludes |
| paradigm | calibre | intractable |
| arché-object | datascape | causation |
| assimilate | connotes | veracity |
| seminal | cathexis | platitudes |
| fraught | benevolent | allude |
| interlocutor | elide | propensity |
| expeditionary | languid | irrevocably |
| strident | promontories | manifold |
| assemblage | absurd | entail |
| vociferous | desire | recourse |
| felicitous | conflates | structuration |
| cogent | solipsism | retrospectively |
| cathect | erudite | unrequited |
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above is a list of words taken from
brunelleschi, lacan, le corbusier : architecture, space and the construction of subjectivity by dr.
lorens holm. this lexicon-scape follows the same rules as my
previous attempt with 'down and out...' yet with this reading of an academic text, the list builds much more quickly, while my reading of it slows down! hence this list represents just 30 pages of his 250 page book.
off the back of my last lexicocentric post, a friend, ian pollard, has kindly pointed me in two mutually diverse directions. the first, which i shall speak about here, is to the french troupe
oulipo : short for
ouvroir de littérature potentielle. these literarians, poets and linguists, from all flights of thought, wished to create new techniques, tools and machines for using words.
"the seeking of new structures and patterns that may be used by writers in any way they enjoy." Constraints are used to trigger new ideas and the Oulipo group is an ongoing source of novel techniques, often based on mathematical ideas -- such as counting letters and syllables, substitution algorithms, permutations, palindromes, and even chess problems."
- from another blog
as if seeking a new language of grammar, the rules by which words were brought together seem exploratory and fresh; they employed
palindromes,
lipograms and other constraints. i think my favourite is the snowball. here follows a 'melting snowball' poem by harry matthews, in which each sequential word is one letter shorter than the previous.
Incontrovertible
sadomasochistic
orthographical
compositional
restrictions
insistently
discipline
grandiose
sixteen's
initial
hubris
right
down
now
to
0
i imagine this mathematicallesque discipline [or perhaps game?] as a great segue between fields of interest. i imagine the numbers of pupils at school who could delight in these ways of looking at words and prose, rather than the strict, perhaps
hard-to-teach methods which i encountered. i'd love to think that while going through borges' library of babel, one would come across every permutation of these writing styles and an infinite amount of others, unfathomable to our cerebral capacity!!!
[thanks for the reference
ian]
Labels: borges, lexicon-scape, words
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