July 1, 2009

Cloud Composing II

Filed under: imagination, invention, networks, nu media, writing — jrice @ 9:34 am

Don’t waste your money on a new set of speakers,
You get more mileage from a cheap pair of sneakers.

Vered, proud of a new purchase of shoes, walks around the house proclaiming: “I have princess shoes!” She is referring to the princess image atop the front of the plastic sandals. Her previous purchase was a pair of sneakers. To that, she proclaimed: “I have tennis shoes” all day long. To see this fascination with shoes is amazing; for so long, we couldn’t get her to keep her shoes on. “Shoes off!” she would yell and take off her shoes and socks. At a stoplight, I would turn around and see her in her bare feet, sitting high in the car seat, proud that she had removed her shoes.  I, on the other hand, wear the same pair of shoes everyday to work. A pair of Naot shoes. Israeli made. They stay on my feet at work.

My speakers were made in 1969 or thereabouts. They belonged to my dad, who bought me a pair of boots when I was five years old. “I have boots!” I would proudly claim to anyone who would listen. For a long time now, I have used that anecdote as the basis of a pedagogy lesson - writing with patterns - where its intersection is with Bootsy Collins, bass player for Parliament. When he played with James Brown, Bootsy’s name wold be called out repeatedly during the break: BOOTSY! BOOTSY! As if he couldn’t hear Brown call to him.  A Foreigner song I never hear on the radio is “The Beat of My Heart.” It contains the lyrics:

If you listen closely now
To the beat of my heart

Of course, if I did hear it, I would likely not know what it is. I am not familiar with this song, and thus, its classic taxonomy is lost to me. Speak. Listen. There may not be a more popular directive in classic rock (or pop music) than the one that asks people to “listen with their heart.” This binary (head vs. heart) becomes a musical cliche. And cliches, as McLuhan once noted, are probes into meaning. “Baby is in time out,” Vered says as she puts a doll on the chair.” “Why is she in time out?” her mother asks. “She didn’t listen to mommy.”

It’s still rock and roll to me. I begin to imagine our personal lives as rock and roll songs. Not actual songs per se, but as framed by classic rock meanings. Listen to your heart. You get more mileage from a cheap pair of sneakers. The Eagles’ “Those Shoes” offers another classic cliche: the girl who loses her innocence to a corrupt society. She, like Vered’s doll in time out, doesn’t listen either:

They’re lookin’ at you, leanin’ on you
Tell you anything you want to hear
They give you tablets of love
They’re waiting for you
got to score you
handy with a shovel and so sincere
Ooh, they got the kid glove

Or she listens to fake praise. Fake acceptance. She is interpellated into a desired position. Her sense of self is called to, like that moment of “Hey You.” I, like most other people my age, have been interpellated by popular culture. In my cloud of composing, that interpellation comes via classic rock.

But you can’t get the sound from a story in a magazine…
Aimed at your average teen

We are not still teens. But we are still caught in this space of identification. McLuhan also noted that the youth today play roles. Media is a role culture: Facebook profiles, blog posts, alter egos.  The role is the status update. What am I doing? Am I listening? Am I listening with my heart?

June 16, 2009

Cloud Composing I

Filed under: networks, nu media, pedagogy, writing — jrice @ 10:19 am

The basic concepts of cloud composing: non-representational (reference is spread elsewhere), meaning saved in another space (punctum based composing since meaning is not found in the space you read but rather in some personal connection motivated by a detail or two), and functions by hyperlinks (the logic of <A>, but not as a mere linking tool - rather as a spatially organizing tool).

Classic Rock

The frequency of Foreigner. One of the most humdrum of all classic rock bands is one of the most dominant on classic rock stations. Where is the line drawn between Bad Company, Free, and Foreigner? One and the same? An F.M. radio station. Scanning the frequency. “Hot Blooded.” “Dirty White Boy.” “Urgent.” Any given day, one can and will hear Foreigner.

The only radio equivalent to Foreigner is The Eagles. If I name all the rock bands I saw in concert growing up in suburban Miami, these are the two I did not see. Why are they not numbered among my many concerts?

1983. In the small music store where I bought my first guitar and amp, I walk past the items for sale toward the backroom where lessons are taught. Each week I am to bring a song I want to learn on tape. The instructor will listen to it, figure out how to play it, and teach it to me. The first song we worked on was “Dirty White Boy.”

2009. On the way to work. 96.7. The meta-ad (as if we are not already listening to this station - we need to be reminded that it exists) comes on using three songs to promote the station. “Hot Blooded” and “Hotel California” are number one and two of the songs. The third is “Slow Ride.”

# has become the symbol of what is happening right now. We process information so quickly, that we need tags (markers) to help us organization it among the various outlets of reception.  Like a conversation about Foreigner. # is also symbolic for the number sign. A “greatest hits” album collects the “top” songs by a given band. The songs are metaphorically numbered.

Every year, we rate the year’s best. #1! We’re #1. Some  people list “Hotel California” as #24 of all time rock songs.  Others as #49.

My permanent “right now” is the status update. Indeed, most of us in the cloud are constantly updating our status.To know who I am, we say, you have to know what I am doing right now. Identity is of the moment.

In “Funky #49,” Joe Walsh sings “Don’t misunderstand me.”

What are you listening to is the always present status update. What are you writing is the status update of the Web. What am I writing right now? Every post, update, feed, twit, etc is a way to get at the question: what am I writing right now. The number (#) of posts I compose on a web space like a blog could be interpreted as numerical and thus representational (i.e., one might point to them in order to demonstrate legitimacy - I work - or importance - I’ve written a lot) or these posts might merely be updates of the same idea. The blog can be merely a way to update.

A Foreigner song might be explained as the update of three chords (either root, fourth, fifth or three chord structure in general). The Eagles song might be explained as the update of the country/folk structure: G, C, D. The number is still three.

When I was 15, and MTV still played videos, I saw a Joe Walsh video for the song “The Confessor.”  The video opens with a shot of a parched landscape. Walsh sings: “When you try to see the meaning hidden underneath/ The measure of the depth can be deceiving.”  I taped it as I did all videos: waiting at the video machine already set to record/pause. When the video I wanted came on, I lifted the pause. My personal video collection is updated with others’ video collections. “The Confessor,” though, is not yet uploaded to YouTube. It’s metaphoric number, what are you listening to, has not yet been called. I cannot understand my own relationship to classic rock until I understand this last point. Why are we updating some information and not other information? What kind of information have we been holding on to all these years, waiting to update (a video, a performance, and idea, a text, a post, a family photo, etc)?

June 15, 2009

Cloud Writing

Filed under: invention, networks, nu media, writing — jrice @ 10:46 am

Cloud computing changes the space of writing from fixity or physicality to the ephemeral. Database. Server. Somewhere else but not here. Not my laptop. Not my desktop. Someone else’s space. We write in the cloud. Google Docs. Acrobat.com. Facebook. Twitter. A blog on an account we rent from a server in another state. Urban/spatial crowding yields to data center crowding. Where to put and store all this information in the cloud?

Like any new media observation, however, meta-talk only goes so far. Yes, we are moving into the cloud, for good or for bad. Like all of our moves, we must ask at least two questions: how does this change my writing/communication practices? WWED. What will education do?

My answers are limited to the continuing quest to reverse Ramist thinking and return the Barthesian nature of inquiry. Let’s make it personal. New media delivery and organization, defined partly by film, provides our rationale: This time it’s personal.  And in my own personal realm, the cloud is motivated by two topics (topoi) of interest: craft beer and classic rock. Let me leave aside the one that has the greatest personal interest (craft beer) for the one that merely interests (classic rock). Classic rock is my punctum. I have no representational “why” as to explain my exigence. It strikes me so.

Where is the cloud of classic rock? How might I compose to it? Alas, the cloud is so spread out that my only hope of making its presence felt would be to hyperlink each space that is out there. I could start a fan page on Facebook, follow or contribute to the # of a Twitter feed, blog about it,post a video, etc.

To do that work, of course, limits the cloud to its representational value: It must be spread out over these particular tools or spaces. Given my academic upbringing, I was led to believe that institutional practices can be invented based on the logic of new media and not only on the actual consumption or usage of tools. In other words, the cloud can be a practice concpetually as much as it is technologically. Here we may find WWED responded to, if not partially answered. My challenge is the one I have already engaged with here on more than one occasion. I want to take my punctum to the cloud. I am looking for a way to compose cloud computing without worrying about an application or computer space. I am looking for a way to introduce its logic to writing much in the way that other new media practices (the essay, for instance) introduced practices to writing (paragraph formation).

How to begin? A series of blog posts, of course.

June 10, 2009

Plato Comes to Missouri

Filed under: McLuhan, folksonomy, invention, media, networks, nu media — jrice @ 12:38 pm

This will likely be the paper I deliver at the Media Ecology Association conference next week. Not formatted like an essay. Just the ideas I will deliver.

Walter Ong tells us that the noetic – the rhetorical characteristics of feeling, sensation, and intuition – stem from the oral tradition. In particular, Ong notes that “oral memory works effectively with ‘heavy’ characters, persons whose deeds are monumental, memorable, and commonly public. Thus, the noetic economy of its nature generates outsize figures, that is, heroic figures, not for romantic reasons or reflectively didactic reasons but for much more basic reasons: to organize experience in some sort of permanently memorable form” (69).  While we may not characterize our current literacy state as “oral” we also cannot deny the oral’s role within a larger network of literacy practices we experience in the 21st century: orality, literacy, and what many call  the digital state of electracy.  In other words:  what Ong attributes to the oral tradition, we can understand as a major part of the current media tradition we belong within. “With the control of information and memory brought about by writing,” Ong argues, “you do not need a hero in the old sense to mobilize knowledge in story form” (70). And yet, heroic or iconic figures do help us organize experience today; we cannot discount their role in spatial arrangements.  Following Ong, we can ask how the noetic might allow for an understanding of rhetorical organization, a way to arrange space or work through space, in the age of media.

June 3, 2009

The Hyperlinked Notes Before a Trip

Filed under: folksonomy, hypertext, imagination, networks, nu media, pedagogy, writing — jrice @ 10:18 am

Listening to Frank Zappa’s “Illinois Enema Bandit” this morning.  We are on our way to Chicago soon. We are driving. In the opening scene of The Blues Brothers, Elwood pulls up to the Illinois prison where Jake is being held. His knuckles reveal tattooed letters of his name. He grips the steering wheel tightly. B.B. King’s “Live at the Cook County Jail” features the classic song “How Blue Can You Get?” The narrator, stuck on a woman who abuses him, sings:

I bought you a brand new Ford
You said, I want a Cadillac

Ford, GM, Detroit. Our current news headlines. In the final chapter of the Digital Detroit draft (which takes up networked decision making), I draw a connection between the MC5 and Norman Mailer. Mailer, writing from the Chicago Democratic convention in 1968, obsesses over the headlines of the late ’60s: war. Mailer, like others who comment on the MC5, conflates electronic media, technology, and hyperbole as he watches the Detroit band perform. Mailer believed he was seeing the truth: the future of politics. The end of war in favor of the emerging revolution brought on by a new generation.

The Illinois Enema Bandit is a true story. His crimes took place in the late ’60s, at the University of Illinois.

The Illinois Enema Bandit
One day he’ll have to pay
One day he’ll have to pay
The police will say, “You’re under arrest!”
And the judge would have him for a special guest
The D.A. will order a secret test
And stuff his pudgy little thumbs in the side of his vest
Then they’ll put out a call for the jury folks
And the judge would say, “No poo-poo jokes!”

As we drop our daughter off at day care  - on the university campus - we wait for her declaration: Poo-Poo? It is always asked as a question, rather than as an affirmation that, yes, she has poo-poo. A similar gesture is made in the Robert Johnson classic “Sweet Home Chicago” (featured on The Blues Brothers soundtrack): Baby don’t you want to go?

Hyperbolic narrative? It is the future of writing pedagogy. The decision of organization and arrangement. What goes where in the networked world of information? How to draw connections?

May 27, 2009

We’re Blogging

Filed under: nu media, writing — jrice @ 3:35 pm

Or are we on Facebook? Where do we broadcast ourselves? Broadcast culture. We want you to know things about our lives. The spectrum is us. This morning, on Facebook, I broadcast that my daughter was throwing a temper tantrum over orange juice we didn’t have but that she insisted we did. Then I asked for some advice regarding graphic novels. For all of our theory training lives, we felt compelled to heed Foucault and the danger of the panopticon. Now we embrace its presence. Come into my kitchen, Robert Johnson plead. Of course. Come in and share my life, my interests, my concerns, my desire.

I would write a book of updates if I could. “I am on the toilet. I am walking out the door. I am reading a book.” Then I would read everyone else’s updates. Broadcast culture makes every academic’s fantasy over Benjamin’s Arcades real. Maybe we need a new type of press. A Lulu for updates.

Take this post. I broadcast it. You read it. Blog cynics ask: why? The voice of reason is always - or always in academia - why bother?  But then again, many of these cynics’ shelves are filled with books. They are not against some form of broadcasting, after all. They don’t want publishing to dry up.  The difference? Let broadcast culture be bound, on paper, and not by me, they request.

Facebook. Do you have a “request,” “an update,” “a highlight” to share? Facebook has been expanding its interest in the banal or everyday. At first, when you join, you are prompted to list your favorites. Favorite books. Favorite movies. Favorite songs.  Now, who follows such things anymore? All I want to do is read the status update feed. Facebook calls this feed “news.” I agree completely.

Is blogging, then, done with? Replaced by Facebook? Of course not. In the age of the network, we do not need to concern ourselves with replacement narratives. This replaces that, the famous Hugo quote proclaims. Does it really? Facebook did not replace the blog. The links move outward. The connections shape new spaces. “Share” my information, many sites request. Share with Facebook. Share with Twitter. We must be the most generous media culture ever. Always sharing.

May 24, 2009

On Anti-Climatic Academic Achievements

Filed under: profession — jrice @ 7:39 pm
  • 2001. “1963: Collage as Writing Practice.” First print publication. “Nice,” is my reaction. I have no other recollection of the event.
  • 2002. Received my first job offer. “So that’s what it feels like.” I start packing books in boxes.
  • 2002. Defended my dissertation. Not much happens that evening. Watched TV?
  • 2004. My textbook is published. “Huh,” I think. “It’s a lot thinner than I’d thought it would be. And I got some free copies.”
  • 2007. The Rhetoric of Cool, my first “real” book, is published. “Hey look! I get six free copies.” We may have gone to bed early that evening.
  • 2009. Tenure. “Huh,” I say. “That was probably the least stressful experience of my academic career.” I make a salad for dinner (Jenny is too sick to join me). We go to bed early.

May 19, 2009

Classic Rock Memories: A Narrative

Filed under: music, nu media, writing — jrice @ 10:25 am

“Fool for the City.” 97.7 KPOW. Columbia, Missouri. 9:00 A.M as I pull into the Turner Parking Garage. Think back: 1985. A flea market shirt bought when I was 15. Foghat on one side, Eddie Money on the other. A joint show played at some point in South Florida? Not one I attended.  The markings of a bootleg shirt: sloppy drawings, bright colors. Black body. White long sleeves. It cost $5.  In South Florida, who needs a long sleeve shirt?

Classic rock songs embrace hyperbole. The flea market shirt always exaggerates the band’s position within the world of rock music. This band is at the center, the shirt seems to say. This band is the only one that matters. The city, too, is a focus of hyperbole. Note the following verse from “Fool for the City”:

I’ll get off on Main Street, step into the crowd,
Sidewalk under my feet, yeah, traffic’s good and loud.
When I see my inner city child, I’ll be walkin’ on a cloud.

As if there is one street that embodies the romance of the urban: Main. That street, Foghat notes, is where you find - not your inner child - but your inner city child. Is the inner city child’s Main Street near Bobby Womack’s 110th Street, the place where “Pimps [are] trying to catch a woman that’s weak.”  Bob Seger, too, romanticized the concept of a “Main Street.” His version, too, was tied to a woman:

Well I’d stand outside at closing time
Just to watch her walk on past
Unlike all the other ladies, she looked so young and sweet
As she made her way alone down that empty street
Down on main street

But no one approached Main Street better than The Rolling Stones, whose nod to this amorphous space within the city portrayed it as a freak show. The cover of Exile on Main Street is telling:

Rather than reduce Main Street to a woman, they pushed sexuality in general: “Tumbling Dice” (”All you women is no damn gamblers, cheating like I don’t know how”), “Ventilator Blues” (”When your spine is cracking and your hands they shake; Heart is bursting and your butt’s going to break; Woman’s cussing, you can hear her scream; Feel like murder in the first degree”) and “Sweet Virginia” (”I want you come on, honey child, I beg of you”). Where is Main Street in this vision? The freakish pull of sex. Main Street is us. The freaks.

To be exiled on Main Street. Every hipster’s fantasy? Strolls. Hanging out. One or two stop lights. Pool hall windows. Neon beer signs. Gassed her up. You’re behind the wheel. Driving down Main Street. Arm out the window. All the windows rolled down.  Women in the rear view mirror. Like a Tom Waits song or a bootleg album title.

The other day, we were driving around Columbia, our windows all rolled up, Vered sitting high in the car seat in the back, and Bad Company comes on the radio (Bad Company is an early version of classic rock standard Foreigner). My wife turned to me and asked: “What is up with you and classic rock these days?” What is the Main Street in Columbia, I should have asked in response. Broadway? 9th? Providence? If I find that answer, will I know why I listen to classic rock in the car? The Bad Company song - “Ready for Love” - played on.

Walkin’ down this rocky road
Wondering where my life is leadin’
Rollin’ on to the bitter end
Finding out along the way
What it takes to keep love living

Once again: a street, a road, a woman. The mix of classic rock hyperbole. The rhetoric of radio stations tuned just right. Suddenly, Vered yelled at me to put on her Oye Baby! CD. The hyperbole broke. We crossed Broadway.

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