Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W4384826066> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 93 of
93
with 100 items per page.
- W4384826066 endingPage "61" @default.
- W4384826066 startingPage "38" @default.
- W4384826066 abstract "Abstract How ›literary mediation‹ is observed from the perspective of literature is discussed in this paper on the basis of Clemens J. Setz’ Bot. Gespräch ohne Autor . It is described here as a network of multiple operations and interconnections that take up excerpts of what has already been published and combine them with something new, and, at the same time, it is made recognizable as a fundamental moment of literature. What is reconstructed here on the basis of and from an exemplum is systematically relevant. The systematic connections that are of interest here, in turn, can only be made plausible by means of the text. This constellation is theoretically indissoluble. This paper discusses this using both the notion of ›epitext‹ and incorporating the concept of ›mediation‹ unfolded by Bruno Latour. It brings the two together and opens the theoretical territory of ›literary mediation and promotion‹. It follows that mediation is defined as an operation that transforms, that is, not conserves and preserves, transferred into terms of literary mediation: not simply explains and comments, but transforms by inscribing and imprinting itself on what it mediates, is emphasized here. For the understanding of literary mediation, it follows that – instead of being in the service of a literary text conceived as an unchanging entity – it is always modifying and translating it in order to continually bring it forth as something new. While peritexts, however supplementary, constitute compact units, the epitextual perspective brings about their spatial and temporal dispersion. Literature is to be grasped epitextually not as a unity, but as an ensemble or network of different elements, references, and functions that project into a virtually expanded environment of a text. With such a reformulation of the concept of literature, it is stated that epitexts are not attributed to the mediation of literature, but to literature, and that the boundary between these areas is thought to be permeable. The article examines how a text file becomes a printed text and how this shapes the understanding of ›digital literature‹. This also addresses the problem of big data , which requires distant reading procedures and to which Bot. Gespräch ohne Author reacts in a specific way, by capturing context-independent »word distributions« (Piper 2018, 43) to use them for new connectivities. The article reveals the shifts between the possibilities of digitization, its literary adaptations, and a literature oriented to the categories of work, author, and book. It is not concerned with replacing texts designed according to traditional criteria with digital surfaces, but rather with pointing out the untranslatability of one system into the other. An untranslatability, however, that can only be demonstrated in the process of translation, the médiation . By taking up concepts of digital culture and incorporating them by quoting, reflecting, and parodying them, the book, consisting of printed paper bound between two covers, allows them to emerge in a disguise as mediators who participate in its shaping. On the one hand, it suggests that there can be no non-digital literature in a digital ecology, even if it ultimately presents itself in paper form; but, on the other hand, it also suggests that an artificial intelligence can only be described as text or code. It can show that and how literature subjects its mediations or the institutional and medial processes linked to literary mediation to (literary) scrutiny and thereby continually negotiates its own literariness. Where mediation meets the concept of literature, it is also challenged as a literary-theoretical category. With the help of the conceptual pair peri- and epitext, which corresponds to the distinction between literature and literary mediation, as well as with the inclusion of Bruno Latour’s concept of the › médiateur ‹, not only the category of the work in the sense of a stable entity distinguishable from its context is questioned, but also – directly related to this – the authorial function as a collectivity of technical operations was traced. A questioning that takes on a particular urgency under the auspices and with the instruments of digitality, bringing to light the traditional concepts of literature as (re)translations, which is exemplified by the transfer of a digital data set into a printed book." @default.
- W4384826066 created "2023-07-21" @default.
- W4384826066 creator A5070514787 @default.
- W4384826066 date "2023-07-18" @default.
- W4384826066 modified "2023-09-23" @default.
- W4384826066 title "Digitale Mittler und literarische Vermittlungen<b>. Clemens J. Setz’</b> <b> <i>Bot. Gespräch ohne Autor</i> </b>" @default.
- W4384826066 cites W1591458392 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W180356628 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W2001771035 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W2490389971 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W2569150124 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W2583401130 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W2727947410 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W2919865306 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W2945017450 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W2945301563 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W2964057465 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W2978288436 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W3004485245 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W3174505588 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W4200131740 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W4205530439 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W4206537469 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W4210248761 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W4210552711 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W4213036957 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W4225140944 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W4233689260 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W4238095003 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W4241511741 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W4245628022 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W4248607572 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W4251593484 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W4251880199 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W4253166033 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W4253485088 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W4255060347 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W4297884342 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W578448756 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W601123223 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W635132820 @default.
- W4384826066 cites W656345078 @default.
- W4384826066 doi "https://doi.org/10.1515/jlt-2023-2003" @default.
- W4384826066 hasPublicationYear "2023" @default.
- W4384826066 type Work @default.
- W4384826066 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W4384826066 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W4384826066 hasAuthorship W4384826066A5070514787 @default.
- W4384826066 hasBestOaLocation W43848260661 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConcept C10138342 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConcept C111472728 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConcept C12713177 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConcept C154945302 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConcept C162324750 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConcept C179420905 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConcept C182306322 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConcept C36289849 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConcept C41895202 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConceptScore W4384826066C10138342 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConceptScore W4384826066C111472728 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConceptScore W4384826066C12713177 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConceptScore W4384826066C138885662 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConceptScore W4384826066C144024400 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConceptScore W4384826066C154945302 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConceptScore W4384826066C162324750 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConceptScore W4384826066C179420905 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConceptScore W4384826066C182306322 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConceptScore W4384826066C36289849 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConceptScore W4384826066C41008148 @default.
- W4384826066 hasConceptScore W4384826066C41895202 @default.
- W4384826066 hasIssue "1" @default.
- W4384826066 hasLocation W43848260661 @default.
- W4384826066 hasOpenAccess W4384826066 @default.
- W4384826066 hasPrimaryLocation W43848260661 @default.
- W4384826066 hasRelatedWork W1987346758 @default.
- W4384826066 hasRelatedWork W2070051673 @default.
- W4384826066 hasRelatedWork W2108611755 @default.
- W4384826066 hasRelatedWork W2132997838 @default.
- W4384826066 hasRelatedWork W2141014878 @default.
- W4384826066 hasRelatedWork W2615415291 @default.
- W4384826066 hasRelatedWork W2748952813 @default.
- W4384826066 hasRelatedWork W2911125927 @default.
- W4384826066 hasRelatedWork W3010474525 @default.
- W4384826066 hasRelatedWork W3209062011 @default.
- W4384826066 hasVolume "17" @default.
- W4384826066 isParatext "false" @default.
- W4384826066 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W4384826066 workType "article" @default.