[Xmca-l] Re: Blokish struggles for power

Rod Parker-Rees R.Parker-Rees@plymouth.ac.uk
Wed Nov 26 22:48:18 PST 2014


Here - http://vimeo.com/search?q=Andy+Blunden

Rod

-----Original Message-----
From: xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu [mailto:xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu] On Behalf Of Greg Thompson
Sent: 27 November 2014 06:25
To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: Blokish struggles for power

Michael,
Stop making sense.
-greg
p.s. Where can I go to see Andy Blunden in concert?

On Wed, Nov 26, 2014 at 5:03 PM, Glassman, Michael <glassman.13@osu.edu>
wrote:

> Just a push back on the idea of blokish struggle for power over particular
> words?   (Is there anybody out there having a power struggle over what
> blokish means?).
>
> There is I think another side to this, something that Vygotsky I think
> refers to which is that words have histories, and perhaps achieve a
> better understanding when we explore those words and their meanings in
> the context of their history.  This is important I think because
> really interesting words with rich meanings and histories tend to
> suffer what might be called a regression to the mean.  Somebody offers
> a simple, more visceral meaning and people pick up on that and then
> they forget the history.  A short anecdote on what I mean by visceral.
> When I was in college the Talking Heads were at their height.  My
> friends would talk about how good the Talking Heads were and I would
> argue against them, being a fan of the Asbury Park/Jersey sound
> (Springsteen, Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes etc.).  Here was
> the thing, I never really listened to the Talking Heads except in the
> background at parties and had never seen them.  Why had I argued
> against them as a good band (late night dorm arguments) - well when I
> thought of Talking Heads I had this visceral picture of them as a
> bunch of heads on the stage mouthing New Wave lyrics.  It had little
> to do with who they really were as a band.  The ending of this little
> story is I finally was dragged to see David Byrne and the Talking
> Heads and to this day it is the greatest concert I've ever been to in my life (this includes multiple Springsteen and Dead concerts).
>
> So why this little story.  Because I worry that sometimes people hear
> words almost into the background and sometimes they get redefined
> based on almost visceral reactions to their texture.  People pick up
> on that and adopt it as part of their vocabulary without ever seeing
> them or going to see them in concert.  Much of the richness of the
> words are lost.  To give an example, I have been doing a lot of
> exploration of Ted Nelson's concept of hypertext.  What a rich,
> radical concept that is - really challenging to way we understand the
> world.  And yet it seems to me the way many people use the word is
> sort of as a regression to the mean, without recognizing its history, the ways it developed and the reasons behind its development.
> If somebody comes and says, "No, that's not what Nelson meant, you
> should see him in concert!" Does that represent a blokish struggle for power?
>
> It's a complex question, because of course there are always overt and
> covert hierarchies - and the people at the top of the hierarchy rarely
> recognize that they even exist.  But there is also a richness to our
> words that can be so easily lost.
>
> Happy Thanksgiving
>
> Michael
> ________________________________________
> From: xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu
> [xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu] on behalf of Bruce Robinson
> [brucerob1953@googlemail.com]
> Sent: Wednesday, November 26, 2014 5:45 PM
> To: xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu
> Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: Fate, Luck and Chance [Language as a form]
>
> Henry,
>
> Your wife's question leads to another: who speaks for the silent
> majority, many of whom, like me, must be getting fed up with what
> David K calls a "rather blokish struggle for power over particular words'?
> [Not Richard Nixon :)]
>
> Bruce R
>
> PS: You may also note that I have not changed the subject heading of
> this message so that it bears no relation to the content. Something
> else I find irritating...
>
> On 26/11/2014 17:16, HENRY SHONERD wrote:
> > Sister Analisa,
> > Thank you for responding! I was just talking to my wife (getting
> personal!) about the chat. She asked me, “How does anyone get to
> participate in the (XMCA) chat if only a few people take part?” I
> wondered in my email below if too much was expected of written
> communication in the XMCA chat. With 800 people potentially taking
> turns, well…what is even possible logistically? Mike Cole has talked
> about this, and, I think, has some suggestions on how to deal with the
> bottlenecking. But even small scale communication can be daunting. I
> watched, with my wife, a Richard Linklater movie last night, “Before
> Midnight”. Two people, face to face, in a totally committed
> relationship, smart people, good people, trying so hard to get it
> right. Always a work in progress. But it’s worth it. The alternative
> is despair. I am sure of this: This chat, which seems to get bogged
> down in abstractions, pure thinking in the mud, is really
> consequential beyond the sensitivities of academics. I said we va
> >   lue Vygotsky’s “heroism”, but that’s too macho. I should have said
> courage.
> >
> > The Linguistic Relativity Hypothesis is a powerful idea, often
> > called
> the Whorf/Sapir hypothesis. Google it. Really. See what you think. One
> gauge of the power of an idea is if it has found its way into popular
> discourse. I just this morning heard an NPR radio program (thanks
> again to my wife, who was listening when she heard something she
> thought I would be interested in) that dealt with the Whorf/Sapir
> hypothesis in its strong and weak form.
> >
> > Henry
> >
> >> On Nov 25, 2014, at 10:11 PM, Annalisa Aguilar <annalisa@unm.edu>
> wrote:
> >>
> >> Dear Henry,
> >>
> >> Thank you for your reply.
> >>
> >> I don't think being personal (or even personable) requires being
> heated. Does this have to do with my comment of warmth as a sign of welcome?
> >>
> >> To speak about culture non-personally is not something I am adept
> >> at
> doing. We are always speaking from where we stand, the culture that we
> are in or from, what-have-you.
> >>
> >> Respectfully, I do not know what "linguistic relativity hypothesis" is.
> So please be patient with me while I connect this academic idea you
> have offered to this conversation so that I can relate that to my
> personal experience speaking on this thread, though clearly I'm not
> speaking literally right now, but it is speech from me, not a sock
> puppet with my voice thrown from the position of objective reality.
> >>
> >> You are talking about speaking two languages. But it seems we are
> >> all
> speaking English on this list. So I'm a bit lost right there what you
> are trying to say to me.
> >>
> >> Then, you speak of metalinguistics and how it represents different
> worldviews, if you don't mind me swapping your use of "perspective"
> for worldview. There is a lot of time clearing muckups to get it
> right. I'm not sure that it ever gets right though, which troubles me.
> I have found that many people who have different worldviews communicate by "talking to,"
> rather than "talking at." I feel, for example, you and I are talking
> to one another, despite our likely different POVs.
> >>
> >> I don't know what the "perish and dapple of Andy" means when you
> >> say
> that. From what I can tell he's trying to define something for himself
> asking for the help of others. That's fine and I'm learning that
> definitions are very bas-relief for him. I think my interests are a
> little different. So I'd prefer to orient to my interests, if that is OK.
> >>
> >> Speaking of metalinguistics, rather than debate over definitions,
> >> I'm
> more interested in speaking to the very different people who are on
> this list. The rumor is there are 800 folks out there. Where are you?
> :) To reference a highly academic quote from the Wizard of Oz:
> >>
> >> "Come out, come out wherever you are, and meet the young lady who
> >> fell
> from the star!"
> >> --Glinda, the Good Witch from the North (waves magic wand)
> >>
> >> I'm curious how others have been inspired by Vygotsky and
> >> sociocultural
> theory, and even other manifestations of his ideas, such as CHAT, etc
> and how people are using these approaches in their work. What is that
> like for you? And to be more specific, what is that like for women and
> people of color? I'm also interested in thinking-out-loud with others
> about Vygotskian concepts that are not easy to understand; to employ
> in real time dialogue and social interaction to leap over zopeds
> together. Isn't that what a listserv is for? Or am I being too idealistic?
> >>
> >> I have tried to speak in an open, easy, and immediate manner, to
> >> allow
> others to engage. But I fear that engagement is never going to happen
> because all that persists are conversations about definitions, or
> whether nothing can come from nothing, and voila! subsequent debates
> ensue. Or someone will say, "We already discussed this 20 years ago!"
> Which means I missed the party, I suppose. Unfortunately, if I
> disagree with a position because I interpret differently, then I'm
> told to go read something without really a clear explanation why I'm supposed to go read something.
> >>
> >> I don't really agree with the approach of "read this," as an
> >> academic
> argument. Anyone is free to use it, and I have myself, but because I
> know how obtuse that can be, I couch it with my reasons why I think it
> would be a good read for that person, and what I think there is learn from reading.
> I think the "read this" approach, when it is offered with the tone of
> "now go eat your vegetables!" fails in the making of speech between
> people. All it does is shut things down.
> >>
> >> If the reading truly is relevant, it seems far more productive in
> >> the
> moment of speech to cue a person what to look for, to supply a
> context, especially when referencing an entire book, for example, or
> the link to an entire website full of texts.
> >>
> >> Your assessment in the physicality of language is something with
> >> which
> I am completely in agreement. Especially since we all seem to agree
> with the material aspects of language. So the question at hand is a
> matter of form. Form has an aesthetic but also has a purpose. Are we
> throwing ropes or throwing boulders? If throwing boulders, where does
> that need to throw boulders come from? If throwing ropes, then at
> least connections are being made for those who might not be very clear
> about ideas and who may require a helping hand.
> >>
> >> Then there's the old, but handy, elliptical comment, something like
> >> a
> boomerang... meant to be subtle or ironic at the expense of someone
> who may not understand.
> >>
> >> At this point, I'd to emphasize that being ignorant is not being
> stupid, but it seems someone who is ignorant is frequently treated as
> stupid (um, on this list). This "phenomenon" has made me reflect upon
> how little time is spent upon the nature of ignorance in education and
> the dynamics of ignorance in speaking. Every one of us is ignorant
> about most things in the world. And yet being ignorant is seen as an
> embarrassment, a deficiency, a lapse in character. I vehemently
> disagree with this reception to ignorance. Even Einstein said
> something like, "The more I know, the more I see how much I don't
> know." Such an aggressive position toward ignorance is nothing but
> hurtful, even arrogant. Arrogance is a blister, a defense mechanism
> from previous hurt. A person who is honest about one's own ignorance
> is a very strong person and is showing a willingness to learn
> something. I think all teachers will agree that a person who knows one
> doesn't know is an easier student to teach than
> >    one who doesn't know one doesn't know.
> >> Iconicity is something I can hang my hat on. I see it is related to
> pointing. What I like about pointing is that it is a gesture, which
> implies movement, in the way the word is also movement. I hope I have
> made sufficient personal connections to your concepts without the
> heat. Thank you for offering them to me.
> >>
> >> Kind regards,
> >>
> >> Annalisa
> >>
> >
>
>
>
>
>


--
Gregory A. Thompson, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Department of Anthropology
880 Spencer W. Kimball Tower
Brigham Young University
Provo, UT 84602
http://byu.academia.edu/GregoryThompson
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