Instructions:
1) Find a newspaper .
A
pair of scissors glue and a few friends.
2) Cut text from head lines, from small print and even
from ads.
Cut single letters, cut words and cut groups
of words.
Do NOT cut out pictures.
3) Talk as you cut. Stop and read if you like. Save the text in a small box.
4) All text in the paper is fair game.
As you cut, you may think about the meaning of the words and how you
will reorganize them.
As you cut, you may think about what words you will need for construction
(a, an, of, or, the, at).
As you cut, you may find words are interesting, left in groups: "golfers
left stranded".
As you cut, you may think about how headline writing is different from
regular writing.
As you cut, you may think about how this paper is different from any
other edition ever published.
As you cut you may, think about what happened or not.
As you cut, talk.
5) Now assemble the letters, words, and groups of words into nonsense poems, into new headlines, into stories, or into pictures. This part of the exercise can be done alone, if need be or in a group or in a cafe. A table to spread out the words helps. The words can be glued onto paper, or arranged 'live' on a photocopier or scanner. Do NOT sign your name to the work. Leave it anonymous. The September 12 Th. paper is a very special paper. It is the last paper without censorship or suspicion. People can get into trouble now by what they write. Staying anonymous is very important in this exercise. The destruction was anonymous. So too should the reconstruction be.
6) What does it all mean?
Here are just a few thoughts:
"The assemblages may begin
to look like ransom notes. They are reverse ransom notes in a sense.
Ransom notes usually make a demand for 'something'. What ever the
'something' is may be hidden in the text of the newspaper."
"The editing process is
backwards. The editing is done first, with scissors, comes before
the writing."
"What peace of mind we had
before the news, can it be reassembled from scraps? Is there meaning
to be found somewhere in the little pieces of paper? Is there meaning
to be found somewhere in the scraps of the buildings and scraps of airplanes
and scraps of people in New York and in Washington? Is there meaning
to be found in the scraps of peoples confidence? We sift through
the news."
7) Here are a few results:
http://www.primititootaa.com/911/poems/sayspy.html
http://www.primititootaa.com/911/poems/canada.html
http://www.primititootaa.com/911/poems/notetous.html
8) Posted poetry is anonymous, free from censorship and free to use without permission.
9) Clean up the mess.
Further study:
Using Deconstruction to Astonish Friends |
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1) Identify a Binary Opposition |
2) Deconstruct the Opposition |