Florian Cramer on Thu, 23 Mar 2000 12:27:58 +0100 (CET) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> web economy bullshit generator |
Am Wed, 22.Mar.2000 um 18:47:22 -0500 schrieb t byfield: > <http://www.dack.com/web/bullshit.html> > > monetize sticky paradigms > morph B2C eyeballs > enhance robust paradigms ... Wired Magazine phrase generator <http://reality.sgi.com/dawson_engr/phrases/wiredPhraser.cgi>: Interactive content providers are surfing the immersive BPM of the broadband village. Way new embroidered circuitry is hacking the cable espresso of technopolis. Fiber internet firewalls are the radical future of Hollywired. Wireless look and feel is morphing into the cellular mothership of the information millennium. Cutting-edge haptic holography is riffing the grunge signpost of Hollywired. Incandescent TV is the online real-time nervous system of the next silicon highway. Techno bandwidth is the online frontier of Hollywired. Holographic wearable networks are jacking into the planetwide cyberstation of cyberspace. Cable media is channeling the technologically unrivalled real-time nervous system of the post-radical cybertribe. Savvy video is downloaded into the decentralized medium of the massively parallel community. Postmodern Thesis Generator <http://www.elsewhere.org/cgi-bin/postmodern>: Poststructuralist textual theory and conceptual subdialectic theory Henry S. Werther Department of Sociology, University of Illinois Jane O. U. Bailey Department of Sociology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1. Smith and conceptual subdialectic theory If one examines the dialectic paradigm of discourse, one is faced with a choice: either reject postcultural capitalist theory or conclude that society, surprisingly, has objective value. The without/within distinction prevalent in Smith's Clerks emerges again in Dogma. But Lacan promotes the use of Derridaist reading to modify and deconstruct class. "Society is part of the paradigm of sexuality," says Lyotard; however, according to Dahmus[1] , it is not so much society that is part of the paradigm of sexuality, but rather the dialectic, and subsequent absurdity, of society. De Selby[2] states that we have to choose between postcultural capitalist theory and capitalist discourse. Therefore, postpatriarchialist semiotic theory suggests that language is capable of truth. The main theme of Geoffrey's[3] critique of poststructuralist textual theory is a self-falsifying totality. In The Aesthetics of Thomas Aquinas, Eco examines postcultural capitalist theory; in Foucault's Pendulum, however, he analyses cultural objectivism. But Bataille's model of poststructuralist textual theory implies that context is created by communication, given that sexuality is equal to narrativity. If one examines conceptual subdialectic theory, one is faced with a choice: either accept the neocapitalist paradigm of discourse or conclude that the establishment is capable of significance. If poststructuralist textual theory holds, the works of Eco are an example of mythopoetical capitalism. Thus, Baudrillard suggests the use of conceptual subdialectic theory to attack the status quo. Debord uses the term 'postcultural capitalist theory' to denote the role of the reader as observer. But Drucker[4] holds that we have to choose between poststructuralist textual theory and textual theory. The premise of postcultural capitalist theory states that expression comes from the masses. Thus, if poststructuralist textual theory holds, we have to choose between postcultural capitalist theory and subcapitalist textual theory. The example of poststructuralist textual theory which is a central theme of Eco's The Island of the Day Before is also evident in The Name of the Rose, although in a more self-fulfilling sense. In a sense, several discourses concerning postcultural capitalist theory exist. Lacan uses the term 'poststructuralist textual theory' to denote a precapitalist reality. Therefore, in The Aesthetics of Thomas Aquinas, Eco denies postcultural capitalist theory; in The Limits of Interpretation (Advances in Semiotics) he analyses conceptual subdialectic theory. Marx promotes the use of cultural theory to modify class. Thus, the meaninglessness, and therefore the economy, of conceptual subdialectic theory intrinsic to Eco's Foucault's Pendulum emerges again in The Island of the Day Before. 2. Poststructuralist textual theory and the neodialectic paradigm of context [...] ___________________________________________________ 1. Dahmus, R. H. (1978) Deconstructing Debord: Conceptual subdialectic theory and poststructuralist textual theory. University of California Press 2. de Selby, W. ed. (1985) Poststructuralist textual theory in the works of Eco. University of North Carolina Press 3. Geoffrey, J. A. E. (1977) The Circular House: Poststructuralist textual theory, feminism and the precapitalist paradigm of narrative. Harvard University Press 4. Drucker, O. F. ed. (1998) Poststructuralist textual theory and conceptual subdialectic theory. University of Michigan Press 5. Sargeant, T. (1989) Reinventing Expressionism: Conceptual subdialectic theory in the works of Gaiman. Schlangekraft 6. Werther, F. J. ed. (1970) Poststructuralist textual theory in the works of Lynch. O'Reilly & Associates 7. Hanfkopf, M. A. Y. (1983) Expressions of Fatal flaw: Poststructuralist textual theory in the works of Fellini. Yale University Press -- Florian Cramer, PGP public key ID 6440BA05 <http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~cantsin/index.cgi> please PGP-encrypt private mail _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold