Mobile Suggestions, Spaces, Humanities
I began this thread of blogged on the spot essay writing with the question of suggestion in a digitized political moment, the photographed images of Occupy Wall Street, including that of the pepper spraying instance which became quickly transformed into a digital image and a set meaning. Yesterday’s comments and brief responses return to that question. In mentioning my own relationship with the Digital Humanities, I summarized the talk I will give at MLA and the forthcoming piece the talk is based on. That summary is also based on some older posts which preceded the writing of the essay. The brief summary drew agreement and disagreement even though no one has heard the talk or read the piece. I only said that the pattern of the talk is bullshit. Thus, without argument, suggestion moved an audience’s response. The same holds true for the pepper spraying photograph: there is no argument or evidence or knowledge of a networked situation. There is only suggestion. Suggestion is a logic extended by digital media.
Yesterday’s post is not, as we might read it, an individual text. It has been networked over many fragmented posts, a talk, a 10,000 word essay, two political events unimportant to me (a pardon and the Occupy movement), other texts, spaces of search, disparate sights of interest, responses, etc. I’m interested in networked spaces of meaning. The Digital Humanities, however, does seem largely interested in individual texts (and thus continues the literary studies tradition of studying the text). I don’t mean to pick on Ted Underwood, who I do not know and only discovered in someone else’s Facebook update (another aspect of search), but his description on identifying patterns of authorial diction as a Digital Humanities project speaks to the individuation of the text. One might be dealing with multiple texts to identify a diction pattern, but one is still within an individual body of meaning (one genre produces results about itself). As Underwood writes:
Of course, once you have an algorithm that convincingly identifies the characteristic diction of a particular genre relative to other publications in the same period, it becomes possible to say how the distinctive diction of a genre is transformed by the passage of time.
This is the individuation of the literary text. And that is fine if one does literary studies, and this is not a critique of Ted Underwood’s project (which resembles many other projects I’ve read about). It’s not particularly digital except that the scanning of documents and usage of “find” allows the repetition to be foregrounded so that a a conclusion about genre can be made. I don’t care if it’s called a Digital Humanities project (since the question of taxonomic “what is” is even less interesting to me), and I don’t care if someone does this type of work. The overall point I might be trying to get at is that its logic is still very much a literary one and not particularly digital in nature.
Another word for text in this context might be space. Whatever I might mean by bullshit in the Billy the Kid piece, I discover it via the search of networked spaces. Only, I network those spaces (I am an agent), and the spaces, in turn, network among each other (they become agents). This, of course, is the basic premises of Actor Network Theory. Separated, the spaces I tag and search (a Pat Garrett memoir, a Billy Joel song, an 1880s Harper’s essay, a Sam Peckinpah film, a Bob Dylan song, James Fredal’s essay, Jim Corder’s work, a news report about who Richardson did, in fact, pardon) have nothing to do with one another. The digital concept of aggregation, however, allows them to be aggregated and put in a space together. As a network, they interact and affect one another (what they cannot do without aggregation). The effect that I trace is bullshit.
I write to aggregated spaces as I make these spaces write with one another as well: the series of blog posts, the Facebook update, the Google + update, the Twitter update, the oral talk, the printed essay, the conversation at home, and so on. I work in the Humanities (I’m still an English professor - for now). I work in the digital (this is my area of research). I suggest spaces as the primary focus of a networked writing that cannot ignore the individual text or space, of course, but that allows that space to be mobile (Mobile Humanities will be the subject of a talk at Bar-Ilan University this summer). I am not arguing. I am suggesting a meaning over the network. If there is an importance to this type of Digital Humanities project regarding invention (and this is the overall idea of the Detroit book due out in February) it is that mobile, networked meanings – as Actor Network Theory shows via tracing accounts) allow other types of insights not evident in the study of the individual text (the problem with the Occupy movement’s focus on an individual text called “corporation” or “capitalism”: the should focus on the mobile instead).
And as I write this, I feel other suggestions, I hear other ideas and moments begin to form relationships with one another. I type. I try to type with one hand as I hold a 14 month old boy in the other. He is very mobile. He climbs up on my lap. He wants to get down. He wants up again. He throws toys across the room. He heads quickly for the pantry to slam the door shut. He hits the cat. He is a vehicle of mobile meaning spread out across our networked space of toys, remote controls, furniture, computers, books, papers, and other odds and ends that make up his world from below. His movement offers me further suggestions regarding writing, professionalism, kids, and …..and….and…I think I will take a digital picture of this moment as well. I want to see what the image suggestions, too.












