Writing, reading, wreading
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5007/%25xAbstract
To think of writing and reading implies mapping an intricate net of relations, of movement, of expressive gestures, that do not allow themselves to be explained in a simple, or definitive manner, mixing creation (written) and reading; shuffling he who gives to read, that which gives itself to be read, and he who gives himself to be read. Privileging such perspectives, this work attempts to study some creations in the digital medium, especially Mark Amerika’s Grammatron, justly departing from the bodies that read and give themselves to be read. Furthermore, one must take notice the curios coincidence between the body [corpo] that reads and the corpus that gives itself to be read, coincidence that goes beyond, far beyond, any etymological simplification.Downloads
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