Wednesday, May 6, 2009
Monday, April 20, 2009
Translations and Collation
Translation of a text can significantly alter meaning, as we saw in the discussion of Rothenberg’s translations. This essay will question how translation can be separated from authorship and when the translator exceeds his or her authority in deciding what to translate and how to translate it. I will also question if it is possible to translate a text without authority on the subject. In the translation process, is authorial intent lost or miscommunicated, and how does this impact the critical edition when translations are ultimately included in creating the textual apparatus.
Furthermore, this essay will explore the impact of sound recordings on textual collation. Addressing the recordings and translations as a project in academic anthropology as presented by Frank Boas, I will consider how sound recordings and translations are representative of the study of human culture and how these types of transmission impact the “spirit of the text.” I will explore the questions of whether translating meaning is more important than trying to maintain a literal word for word transcription. By including or excluding translations and a sound recording of the author reading his or her text, does the spoken text differ from the written text and, if so, which is more closely connected to authorial intent? How does excluding a sound recording alter the meaning, even though the written words may not change? This essay will ultimately question whether the editorial procedure of comparing notes and constructing trees and a textual apparatus is sufficient in formulating authorial intent, or does the inclusion of a sound recording and exclusion of a literal translation more fully complete the process and create a better critical edition.
Monday, March 30, 2009
Technology Doesn't Replace the Brain in Your Head!
Also, technology seems to replace our brains. Where would we be without calculators? Granted, they are incredibly helpful, particularly to the mathematically challenged like myself, but maybe I could balance my checkbook without a calculator if I hadn't been handed one in second grade and became dependent on it. Another example, I was recently riding with my mother and sister to La Plata, MD where my sister lives, a trip all of us have made multiple times, and my mother insisted on using her Garmin. When the Garmin didn't say to exit, even though we all knew what exit to take and were being instructed to drive past it, my mother kept driving until we were far into Virginia and the Garmin began rerouting the directions. An argument quickly ensued, and my sister got the last word when she shouted, “The Garmin doesn't replace the brain in your head, Mom!” How true. The Garmin is helpful—unless you're lost in Pittsburgh and it keeps telling you to turn the wrong way on a one way street—but why do we feel the need to constantly replace what already works? This is why I liked the Dead Media Project. Maybe we should slowdown the technological advancements and work on improving what we have, rather than always creating something new. Maybe we are missing something that could help us in the present because we are too busy looking for something newer and faster. It's a tough call. I cannot and do not want to discredit some of the advancements made in technology, like the unbelievably clear 3D ultrasound I recently had, but at the same time, I cannot get completely on board with always upgrading.
I realize the questions are missing here and this is not exactly on point with Sterling's essay, I just really enjoyed this reading and began thinking of these issues as Sterling discussed the need to investigate dead media. So, in a final attempt to ask a question, what can we learn from examining dead media, and why haven't we been doing more of this?
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
That said, I wonder if anything can still be original. Whether authorial intent plays a role or just the criticism of the audience makes something sampled, there seems to always be a comparison or a harkening back to a previous form. I have yet to read a book, or hear a song or album, that is not likened to something before it, either for its similarities or blatant attempts to be different. Of course, originality seems to have varying meanings then. Some work has to be original. Whether influenced or not, any remix or sampling is original in its own form and has to have properties that separates it from the predecessor, otherwise it is an exact copy. Whether is varies only in the handwriting, there is something different about it that makes it unique.
Monday, February 23, 2009
Random and Confused or Organized and Intentional?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YxrI561jqbw
How then, does such a random performance maintain enough of its original state to be art? More importantly, is the randomness itself the art?
As I am very unfamiliar with sonic culture, sound performance, noise, etc… I tried to connect all of this to something I can better understand. Hip-hop and dj performances are not completely different from anti-records. The underground scene and dj battles especially. As this video shows, this is certainly a performance and arguably art, and though the recording itself won’t change much. The performance/art could change dramatically depending on the venue, the turntables, mixer, speakers, amplifiers, other equipment, even the dj’s mood at the time. So even though this seems really planned and thought out, the art itself can be just as random and different as an anti-record.
http://www.djbattle.net/video_view.php?mID=46 (I apologize if you have to download this. I had trouble uploading the file from my computer.)
This video brings me to my second point. Considering last week’s discussion on the history of sound production and recordings, combined with Shannon and Rice from this week, I wonder how much these things have evolved or revolutionized? It seems that what was being done in the 1930s is still being done today. DJs, though not entirely of the same sound performance, destroy records to make a new sound. They “recycle records to create sound montages” like Paul Hidemith and Ernst Toch did in 1930; they experiment “with records, playing them backwards, varying speeds, etc.” like Edgard Varese in 1936; they stick “tape on top of records, paint over them, burn them, cut them up and glue different parts of records back together, etc.” like Milan Knizak in 1963 (some of this is visible on A-Trak’s vinyls.) All of this creates “new compositions” and plays into the idea that “no recording medium, it seems, can escape eventual manipulation by conceptual artists” (Rice). If this is the case now, in 2009, for both underground and commercial hip-hop, what has changed other than the technology? The techniques are the same though the quality may be different. The performers/artists are not radical, not even totally original in their methods. Perhaps this goes along with the theme that art has no boundaries and exposing oneself to the various possibilities will help develop a better understanding of/appreciation for, noise in all its forms.
Monday, February 16, 2009
Use your listening ears!
Furthermore, why should “we … presume to know exactly what it was like to hear at a particular time or place in the past" (19). All history is interpretation. Reading Victorian novels offers a glimpse into the historical society, but does not tell the reader what exactly it was like during that time and place. I’m not sure why Sterne focuses so heavily on sound as being shaped by history and culture, I think all things are. Written text certainly is shaped by culture and different movements arrive at different times. Visual arts see the impact of a historical moment. I do not see why sound recordings should be any different.
There are no real answers here and I’m hoping to read more of the book and find some answers. Sterne intrigues me more out of disagreement than enlightenment, but I still need to figure out what his real message is. I will keep reading and hopefully have some more answers before class discussion. For now, however, I think sound recordings are outstanding and helpful, though not definitive, in understanding history.
Monday, February 9, 2009
Not Discontinued, New and Improved
I find all of the readings and ideas on orality and literacy, orality vs literacy, etc very intriguing. I'm especially interested, however, in The People's Poetry Language Initiative. There seems to be a push from the Initiative toward avoiding the dominant culture/language, but it also seems as though the weaker languages depend on the dominant culture/language. Through translation, particularly of “original works” that aren't “translatable literally,” the culture and tradition of that language does not necessarily disappear but it evolves (Rothenberg, Total Translation). In fact, it seems undeniable that without the dominant cultures with the “means to document, preserve and disseminate cultural expression” of endangered languages, these languages would already be dead. How then, can the Initiative, and anyone who has an interest in preserving these endangered languages, translate and foster human creativity without changing the original or instituting some necessary form of adaptation? And even though multilinguaslism would certainly help, I don't think anyone could learn all 6500 languages that could potentially be lost.
Also from this essay, or declaration, I wonder about the true nature of endangerment poetry faces. It seems that poetry is less endangered than perhaps the language itself. At the risk of making a completely incorrect claim (as I have not studied/researched this enough to know), it seems as though poetry of a particular language can long outlive the language itself. Sounds contradictory, but I believe many cultures speak a different language in daily communication, but have been able to maintain some originality of the previous language through poem recitations and song. And while I am concerned and disheartened to think that a language could die or be lost, I am also inclined to believe that this is the natural order of things. It is “the Darwinian way of the world,” and though it is unfortunate, I don't think it is entirely bad. With the evolution of a language, we get something greater. I have never believed language to be static and unchanging, even in dominant cultures, language evolves—and I think this is good. I'm glad that we have “hip hop, poetry slam[s], and cowboy poetry [that] harken back to the ancient oral traditions, to the poetry competitions spanning cultures from Ancient Rome to medieval Japan, and to the devastated poetry of indigenous communities from the Americas to Oceania” (Initiative 4). Such performances are new and different, but not bad. I do not disagree that we need to protect endangered languages (i.e. cultures) as much as possible, but I do not think we should do so at the risk of missing something new.