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Fleming, Juliet. ''Graffiti and the Writing Arts of Early Modern England.'' London: Reaktion Books, 2001.
Fleming, Juliet. ''Graffiti and the Writing Arts of Early Modern England.'' London: Reaktion Books, 2001.


:"As far as I am concerned, a 'text' is a piece of writing that has been established as such for reasons that are themselves material, historical, and ideological. The notion of a 'text' represents the assumption that a certain form of consciousness has been able to dictate the terms of its own material constraints, and consequently remains, in some crucial sense, unbound. It is for this reason, of course, that the 'text' earns its privileged status as a register through which the mind may express itself freely. But my own project is engaged with the other end of the expressive spectrum, where '''matter appears to bind thought''' -- where, for example, an inscription may take the form of the implement on which it appears." (12-3)
Puttenham, ''The Arte of English Poesie''; how visual shapes affect poetic interpretations; line of poetry as "visual as well as an aural unit" for Puttenham and his contemporaries -- poems as "ocular representations" (18); "With Renaissance poetry, on the other hand, the eye is granted equal importance, and the '''visual dimensions of language''' ... are accorded an affective and cognitive consequence as familiar to Renaissance readers as it has since become strange" (19)
'''posy''': "fully material, visual mode" of poetry "as it exists in its moment, at a particular site"; is portable "precisely because it has not achieved, and does not hope to achieve, the immaterial, abstracted status of the infinitely transmissible text" (20)
''not'' Marxist materialism but more "traditional materialism that pits consciousness directly against matter" (21)
:"To use this register is to return to an intellectual moment -- that of the English Renaissance -- which lacked a systematic bifurcation between real and thought objects, and consequently apprehended matter not as that which is deprived of meaning but as a principle of structure that underpins all meaning." (21)
[[Foucault 1970]], Renaissance episteme in which words are things, bearing hidden signatures (23); "the reduction of the visible world to a two-dimensional writing surface" (24); "fundamental synesthesia" (25); no difference betwen painting and writing, writing on paper or on a way, body or axe, "'''no difference, finally, between writing and other visual patterns'''" (25)


== Graffiti ==
== Graffiti ==
no term for graffiti in early modern English, "a fact suggesting not so much that the vice was unknown, but that the activity was not distinguished from other writing practices, and '''not yet considered a vice'''" (33)


== Whitewash ==  
== Whitewash ==  

Revision as of 16:25, 8 October 2010

Fleming, Juliet. Graffiti and the Writing Arts of Early Modern England. London: Reaktion Books, 2001.


"As far as I am concerned, a 'text' is a piece of writing that has been established as such for reasons that are themselves material, historical, and ideological. The notion of a 'text' represents the assumption that a certain form of consciousness has been able to dictate the terms of its own material constraints, and consequently remains, in some crucial sense, unbound. It is for this reason, of course, that the 'text' earns its privileged status as a register through which the mind may express itself freely. But my own project is engaged with the other end of the expressive spectrum, where matter appears to bind thought -- where, for example, an inscription may take the form of the implement on which it appears." (12-3)

Puttenham, The Arte of English Poesie; how visual shapes affect poetic interpretations; line of poetry as "visual as well as an aural unit" for Puttenham and his contemporaries -- poems as "ocular representations" (18); "With Renaissance poetry, on the other hand, the eye is granted equal importance, and the visual dimensions of language ... are accorded an affective and cognitive consequence as familiar to Renaissance readers as it has since become strange" (19)

posy: "fully material, visual mode" of poetry "as it exists in its moment, at a particular site"; is portable "precisely because it has not achieved, and does not hope to achieve, the immaterial, abstracted status of the infinitely transmissible text" (20)

not Marxist materialism but more "traditional materialism that pits consciousness directly against matter" (21)

"To use this register is to return to an intellectual moment -- that of the English Renaissance -- which lacked a systematic bifurcation between real and thought objects, and consequently apprehended matter not as that which is deprived of meaning but as a principle of structure that underpins all meaning." (21)

Foucault 1970, Renaissance episteme in which words are things, bearing hidden signatures (23); "the reduction of the visible world to a two-dimensional writing surface" (24); "fundamental synesthesia" (25); no difference betwen painting and writing, writing on paper or on a way, body or axe, "no difference, finally, between writing and other visual patterns" (25)

Graffiti

no term for graffiti in early modern English, "a fact suggesting not so much that the vice was unknown, but that the activity was not distinguished from other writing practices, and not yet considered a vice" (33)


Whitewash

Tattoo

Pots