Author Archive

Discourse, Fandom, Methodology

By lelangir on 29 June 2009 | Internet | 1 Comment

warning: meta junk.

Brother ghost has written us another post, and a reply we shall conjure.

He writes:

Stories have become primary methodology of education. It’s not that really different now. We have enormous variation in terms of media, but stories perform many of the same purposes: to educate the listener/reader/viewer in language and culture, and to be entertaining while doing so.

As I interpret and extrapolate, ghost establishes a methodology of learning via stories. Here, media acts as a vehicle for stories, which themselves are vehicles for values and norms (i.e. I learn through the bible that raeping women is r..wrong).

I add that stories have a meta-value here. The original methodology that we speak of – that is, the simple transmitting of values – can form the foundation of what some theorists might call critical consciousness, or, in other words, awareness, reflexivity, etc. Reflexivity occurs when people are critical of methodology: “no, ur doing it wrong!” “____ is cancer!” “only weeaboo like teh Narutos.” etc.

Because we’re intrinsically speaking of people here (people are basically the operative factor in talking about “transmitting values”), we have to frame all of this in terms of populations. For the sake of anime relevance, and we’ve probably spoke about this already somewhere down the road, fans are those who partake in methodology but are not critical of other fans. Once, however, a fan becomes critical (or remotely aware of other fans and their methodological behaviors) of another fan, they enter the fandom.

Yet here is the central problem: can fandom exist merely by the nonverbalized consciousness of individuals? – or does fandom require discourse? This is kind of a Foucauldian take on Marxism: critical discourse makes up the material base upon which the superstructural “fandom” is situated. Because this is the internet, discourse is necessarily “material”. It’s significant to consider, however, that in this perspective, fandom is not a material entity but an ideology whose territory engulfs its own constituents. So to speak, the process of becoming conscious (entering fandom) then expands the “mass” of the ideology of fandom.

But anyway, I would say that fandom requires discourse to exist.

An interesting turn on this is what you might call the “counter-meta methodological faction”. Of course, we’ve seen the sections of fandom that scoff at critical discourse, instead emphasizing focus on methodology, without all the wwwwwww stuff. It’s a good point, but it’s interesting because it’s a discourse that runs counter to itself in order to end itself.

There’s some more to this, but I forgot, so that’ll be part 2, maybe.

twitter philosophy

By lelangir on 22 March 2009 | Art and Culture | 47 Comments

OGT: Thought: Western intellectual tradition: “Humanity is imperfect and must strive towards perfection.”

OGT: Thought 2: Eastern intellectual tradition: “Humanity is imperfect, and must strive towards acceptance of that imperfection.”

lelangir: wow I like eastern tradition moar.

ghostlightning: A syncretic view: Everything is perfect the way things are. Imperfection is a human construct too.

lelangir: political view: syncretism is a cop-out, we need to stick constructively towards a defined goal.

ghostlightning: If imperfection is “something’s wrong,” it gets in the way of dialog as it tends to affix blame rther than inspire responsibility.

OGT: Thought 4: I think too much. Back to Victory Gundam.

THIS

or

nihilism is knowledge/power; in most cases, it can only be realized/actualized within capitalist institutions, thus materialism is the means towards idealism, towards the construction of contingent truths, towards a philosophical happiness that grants material happiness.

re: Ueno-sensei on individuality

By lelangir on 13 March 2009 | Art and Culture | 12 Comments

THE PINNACLE OF RELEVANCE!

In part of a post, omo brings up a very interesting thing that really tickles my balls.

On Blogging Part 5: broadcast perimeter and idiom-centric insertion and expansion [in other words, OH SHI- FLUTES]

By lelangir on 8 January 2009 | Internet | 21 Comments

←[108]  jpmeyer brings up a whole lot of excellent points:

A Christmas Dialogue

By lelangir on 5 January 2009 | Anime, Art and Culture | 13 Comments

This was a round-robin by lelangir, Lbrevis, ghostlightning and usagijen. In it, we start by discussing Christmas (we started a while ago heh…) and how it’s turned into such a commercial enterprise. We use Kannagi and Lucky Star as vehicles for our discussion.

This round robin took place in the form of a chain letter. I wrote a short remark, and emailed to the next participant. I hoped that this would develop a linear dialogue, although that’s only part true.

Over 9000 meaningless words

By Pontifus, lelangir, Cuchlann and ghostlightning on 31 December 2008 | Anime, Art and Culture | 15 Comments

Ulterior motives in using this picture? Nah.

I have to admit, this one’s a little ridiculous, even for us. Ghostlightning, lelangir, Cuchlann, and I all somehow ended up in a chat a scant few hours ago. Initially, the topic was Kannagi, but, when matters of disparate theory arose, things got a little crazy. The title is apt; in fact, what you’ll see after the break is no less than 11,001 words of our discourse and debate. Is it worth reading? Absolutely.

It’s a good thing the concept of tl;dr doesn’t exist on Super Fanicom.

brief thoughts on social commentary

By lelangir on 20 December 2008 | Art and Culture | 10 Comments

←[94]

Basically…

So when an author deliberately pens a text as social commentary, it is directed towards society, the mainstream. That’s subversive, counter-hegemonic, whatever you want to call it, since it steps outside the dominant discourse (which I tried to represent with the spray paint tool). The hegemonic text is one that is already in society, it has no political aims.

The location of the viewer is tricky, so their societal dislocation here doesn’t mean anything, it’s just for graphical convenience.

In the hegemonic model, it’s hard or impossible to distinguish between society, the text and the author because the author doesn’t try to step outside the discourse. It’s already immersed, that’s why the link is hazy (the question mark). It’s kind of like autonomous homogeneity, if you can parse that.

In the subversive model, the author’s text is also separated from the dominant discourse and its pointed towards it. The red arrow shows the line of reading; the viewer reads the text and is directed towards society through the words of the text/author.

I don’t know about the relationship between the text and the author.

Regardless of politics, both models are historical, and reading any one of them can provide clues as to what society was like way back when.

A Tutorial on Optimizing Your Reading?

By lelangir on 26 November 2008 | Internet | 6 Comments

This is the only time I will ever whore post across many blogs. Forgive me. It’s justified because it’s for you!

This “discovery” is the product of a long line of meta posts that went around the past few days. I won’t bore you with the posts themselves. Usagijen and RyanA had an awesome thought, and to quote RyanA:

What would be really awesome, you may already be thinking this, is to have an aggregator of various reader/blogger’s lensing/noting (Shared Items in Google Reader). Unfortunately, this is more work for authors and asking readers to do such a thing is sort of fishy. If there were a sub-group of producers, not authors, that did this and that is all they did, it could be highly effective…. I wonder if any team-blogs have thought of designating that position to members.

This is a short guide on how to “optimize” your google reader experience. Of course, only those will gmail accounts will benefit from this, but if you didn’t use gmail, you don’t deserve to read this anyway.

On Blogging Part 4: nexistence and z-axis orientation

By lelangir on 26 November 2008 | Internet | 5 Comments

←[85] (part 1, 2, 3) (collective train of thought: RyanA 1, 2 – Intro 1, 2)

RyanA: What would be really awesome, you may already be thinking this, is to have an aggregator of various reader/blogger’s lensing/noting (Shared Items in Google Reader). Unfortunately, this is more work for authors and asking readers to do such a thing is sort of fishy. If there were a sub-group of producers, not authors, that did this and that is all they did, it could be highly effective…. I wonder if any team-blogs have thought of designating that position to members.

Wow, that’s a really nifty idea. I hadn’t been thinking of that specifically, but I had been conjuring up some group google documents thing. The problem is that I think using platforms besides blogs enters into the “private sphere”, effectively damming communication. Twitter is for bloggers by bloggers just as these posts kind of are, but that’s a totally content related matter as opposed to form-oriented.

You could approach the following paragraph in two or three ways, I think:

Linguistic Quandry on Fansubs

By lelangir on 10 November 2008 | Internet | 12 Comments

←[76]

Just some questions on the recent fansub debate, apart from the lighthearted mocking.