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Displaced metaphors: poetic engagements with language in a digitised world
journal contribution
posted on 2017-04-30, 00:00 authored by R Todd, Lucinda McKnightLucinda McKnight, O BullockThis practice-led paper discusses an ongoing creative and conceptual collaboration between three authors, in which poetry is approached as a means of exploring how lived experience and language are being transformed by the rapid evolution of digital devices and technologies. We reflect on our use of poetry to explore and interrupt the increasing invisibility of metaphors such as ‘cloud’ and ‘screen’ as applied to technology, by re-foregrounding the disjunctions between metaphor and what it describes. Engaging with the work of Ricouer and Blanchot, we consider the unique operations of literary language and the ability of poetry to invite critical encounter in ways that foreground physical sensation and the free association of signifiers. We explore how such poetic engagements offer an important means of approaching questions concerning the implications of digitisation, via language and lived experience on what we perceive as the “real.” In this context, we consider Baudrillard’s dystopic postulations regarding simulacra and hyperreality, and Susan Stewart’s perception of digital modes of communication as inducing a nostalgic longing for the immediacy of pre-digital reality. As this paper will discuss, such possibilities, at once dystopic and mournful, are at once complicated and offset by the generative potential of creative engagements with digitisation, which have exciting possibilities for creative practice.
History
Journal
TEXT: journal of writing and writing coursesVolume
21Issue
1Pagination
1 - 1Publisher
Australasian Association of Writing ProgramsLocation
Nathan, Qld.ISSN
1327-9556Language
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
[2017, Australasian Association of Writing Programs]Usage metrics
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