#brylowed
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engl333blog · 2 years ago
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final reading roundup
knight: this is just one of those pieces where. you suddenly remember how arbitrary ostensibly non-arbitrary things are? i’ve spoken about this in the discussion boards but it’s like... wait, we made the alphabet up. it’s not some immutable fact of the universe. which is fascinating, because in turn, when we get to collections--it’s easier to remember that the way we collect speaks more about the values of the collector than of the collection’s intrinsic worth.
trettien: THIS IS SO GOOD ON THE HEELS OF THE KNIGHT PAPER. 
“... we might read this move as a deliberate, even protofeminist, media innovation: that is, by applying their domestic skills to “hacking” (cutting, chopping) printed books, the women of Little Gidding carve out a space in which to publish their work in a culture that was otherwise hostile to their participation.”
i spent a bit of time on levi-strauss and derrida’s bricolage last term and thought about it as a means of adaptation: the protagonist of chris abani’s graceland spends his time building western culture into his life in nigeria not just as a livelihood but as a means of self-expression? not only do the little gidding texts apply in the DIY sense of bricolage, and in the collage sense of putting stuff together--but also the almost intertextual nature of what they put together. theophilus as the addressee of luke, but also luke’s preface, and all that--there’s a very pointed reference to be had there, and a certain amount of knowledge needed to parse it
(i actually also think a little bit of the web-weaving trend going around on here. users pick a theme and pop specific texts together. or of blackout poetry/found media)
brylowe: OH hello miranda burgess! (literally cited, very fun.) there’s this... argument to be made, i guess, about prioritizing the constructedness of everything. we think about ideas, or about the actual work of labour, but the paper underneath it seems... always there. it just Is. but in reality, as brylowe calls out, the paper needs to be made: and where that paper comes from is--was--frequently very smart and very cool, but not always savoury. something something spectrality, the secret weird stuff going on in history that makes the surface level social dynamics--like in austen!--possible. there’s a kind of... fantasy of labourlessness that’s at play when we forget about the materials we work with. 
senchyne: there’s a PAPERWORK STUDIES??? also speaking of bricolage...
“A single sheet of paper really was composed of thousands of shreds of cloth collected from all over, and possibly from within one’s own community. Thus it is not unimaginable, if a bit fantastical, to entertain the unlikely possibility of one’s own shirt being comingled with the neighbor’s in the paper one read.”
the paper and what is printed on it being presented as both metaphor for society and integral to the continuance thereof... it’s very much “only YOU can stop forest fires” type rhetoric, the way that contributing to the stock of rags is like, a more serious form of patriotism. which of course in turn sparks the more ideological form of patriotism (which is the talking). where brylowe was calling out the way the labour of paper-making is elided, it’s interesting that here it’s highlighted and turned into something Bigger. 
garibaldi: this is so--it’s a lot to have going on. i’ve spoken somewhat on the boards about like, the role of representation and the slow ascent into the era of sensitivity readers. the discourse is Fraught for sure, and not in a new way either: watching Black authors themselves figure out how to talk about race and racism to children feels a lot like something that might happen now. and it’s like--we see a lot about reading and papermaking as integral to shaping and putting forward ideas like patriotism, and it kind of hammers home how... if something isn’t Out There then it’s so much more of a pain to get it out there? it’s so much harder to think something when you haven’t got anything to build off of (which is how the little things about plantations apparently passed muster like ???????) 
hayles: i’ve made my thoughts known already on the discussion board about embodied reading (!!!) and the work of sorting through text. but all things told, i thought that the “aesthetic of bookishness” was going to be something else. i mean i owned up to this in the judging a book assignment, but i’m not a stranger to the image of being “literary”, leather tomes and all. there’s a weird, hyperspecific clout that i think being “a reader” who “reads for fun” carries (in my circles anyway) especially now that everything’s so digital. it’s something to Choose to Do instead of something that’s just done--too many formats, too many other choices of leisure??? i think to some extent the book might also come to represent--the establishment, i guess. a sanctioned kind of knowledge--an archive of credibility, no matter how inane or ridiculous the actual content it. (i read the hayles before i read the senchyne but this is great with derrida’s paper machine.) i think of julietta singh’s “no archive will restore you” where she kind of talks about the competitiveness of grad school being built on what “archives” you’ve built for yourself--what, exactly, is it that you know? which might be a different kind of bookishness in and of itself. 
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gabyj · 8 years ago
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bookofthebookoffrida · 3 years ago
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“Paper and the Poor: Romantic Media Ecologies and the Bank Restriction Act of 1797″
by Thora Brylowe
“But paper for Derrida is never really real. It is an ‘anamnesis’, a fantasy, a game, a receptive virgin, or a motherly support onto which the ‘work’ of writing is done” (2)
Every time I see a quote from Derrida it makes me want to read his works more and more. He says wacko stuff like this but what I’ve found that he always has a way of backing up his wacko.
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oishiofthebook · 3 years ago
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Bits from books #9
Brylowe, Thora. “Paper and the Poor: Romantic Media Ecologies and the Restriction Act of 1797.” Literature Compass, vol. 16, no. 2, 2019.
“Paper, then, was much more than a site of inscription. Perhaps its receptive, creamy surface invites consummation by pen or a hard encounter with leaden type. But this beguiling passivity comes at the expense of a violent past. Let us not forget the excruciating punishments of our linen seed. Adventures of a Quire of Paper is not the only text that makes the obvious connection between the paper and suffering” (5).
This was such an interesting reading. I never thought about paper in that manner, and indeed, without the paper, we would not have text in the same way. The connection that the reading makes between paper and suffering humanised the paper for me. It made me think about articles I have read that talk about how hundreds of trees are chopped down to produce paper, and I drew a link between trees and the rags that are taken from people.
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torley · 3 years ago
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Wanderer Azurite Demo Song Movie - Torley | Ambiente Solstice | Fabbro | Brian Brylow - YouTube Electronic Music Culture https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F64kNeNeM7s
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ebooks101sm · 5 years ago
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(via Computer Science An Overview 12th Edition by Brookshear Brylow Test Bank - Home Testbanks and Solutions)
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dameint · 5 years ago
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(via Solution Manual for Computer Science An Overview 12th edition by Brookshear and Brylow - Solution manual testbank instruction manual download for text book)
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34postingpro · 5 years ago
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(via Computer Science An Overview 12th Edition by Brookshear Brylow Solution Manual - Home Testbanks and Solutions)
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brningcrown-blog · 8 years ago
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Thank you for tagging me @alinasterkov ❤️❤️ Rules: Answer the questions and then tag 5 people 1) Favorite Book of all time? - I don’t really have one favorite book, but Red Queen & The Deathly Hallows are up there. 2) Book you’re currently reading? - Ignite me by Tahereh Mafi 3) Have you ever considered writing a book? - Yes. 4) Favorite Series? - Red Queen, LOTR, Shatter Me, Harry Potter, Throne of Glass, A Court of Thorns and Roses, The Selection, Shadow and Bone, Six of Crows, The Wrath and the Dawn, etc. 5) Books you’d like to read? - The Vampire Diaries 6) What’s in your tbr pile? - uhhh a lot 7) Favorite Fictional Characters? - Tiberias “Cal” Calore, Coriane Jacos, Maven Calore, Helion, Rhysand, Feyre Archeron, The Suriel, The Bone Carver, Nesta Archeron, Cassian, Azriel, Morrigan, Kallias, Viviane, Amren, Nikolai Lantsov, Aleksander Morozova (Darkling), Daenerys Targaryen, Ron Weasley, Fred Weasley, George Weasley, Hermione Granger, Dorian Havilliard, Aelin Ashryver Galathynius, Steve Rogers, Natasha Romanoff, Gamora, Star-Lord, Drax, Rocket, Groot, Sam Wilson, Barry Allen, HR Wells, Harrison Wells (earth 2), Sam Winchester, Dean Winchester, Amara, Castiel, Crowley, Rowena, Kevin, Bobby Singer, Eileen Leahy, Donna Hanscum, Jody Mills, Claire Novak, etc. (This is the shortest I could make this list lol) 8) Fav Ship of all time? - Romanogers, MareCal, Warnette, Alarkling 9) Pick up the book closest to you, open to page 1, and read the first paragraph. - The Face on the Milk Carton by Caroline Cooney “Janie never finished her essay. She never knew what grade she would get in Mr. Brylowe’s English class. Whenever she joked, he wanted the essay serious. Whenever she was serious, he had intended to be light-hearted.” 10) What was the first book fandom that you were in? - Harry Potter :) I tag:: @nununkasmile @poseiodn @feysandsmut @ignitemedarling @nestaxarcheron
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Download Test Bank for Computer Science An Overview 12th Edition
Click here to view sample of computer science an overview 12th testbank 
 Link full download :http://testbankcollection.com/download/test-bank-for-computer-science-an-overview-12th-edition/ ISBN-13: 978-0133760064 ISBN-10: 0133760065 computer science an overview 12th edition answers computer science an overview 12th edition by j glenn brookshear and dennis brylow computer science an overview 12th edition chapter 2 review answers computer science an overview 12th edition answers pdf computer science an overview 12th edition chapter review answers computer science an overview 12th answer computer science an overview 12th edition solutions computer science an overview 12th edition answer key computer science an overview 12e test bank test bank computer science an overview 12th edition
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jkqukyn-blog · 7 years ago
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Test Bank for Computer Science An Overview 12th Edition by Glenn Brookshear and  Dennis Brylow
Link full download:http://testbankcollection.com/download/test-bank-for-computer-science-an-overview-12th-edition/ ISBN-13: 978-0133760064 ISBN-10: 0133760065 computer science an overview 12th edition answers computer science an overview 12th edition by j glenn brookshear and dennis brylow computer science an overview 12th edition chapter 2 review answers computer science an overview 12th edition answers pdf computer science an overview 12th edition chapter review answers computer science an overview 12th answer computer science an overview 12th edition solutions computer science an overview 12th edition answer key computer science an overview 12e test bank test bank computer science an overview 12th edition
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gabyj · 8 years ago
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This simple blind suite was just too good! Crafted by @brylo_wed. . . . #minimalinvitation #blindimpression #letterpress #simpleweddinginvitation #minimalweddinginspiration #brylowed #minimalbride #minimalism #goodmanfilmlab #weddinginvitations #simplicity #whiteonwhite #minimalwedding
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pvnqx-blog · 7 years ago
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Test Bank for Computer Science An Overview 12th Edition by Glenn Brookshear and  Dennis Brylow
Link full download:http://testbankcollection.com/download/test-bank-for-computer-science-an-overview-12th-edition/ ISBN-13: 978-0133760064 ISBN-10: 0133760065 computer science an overview 12th edition answers computer science an overview 12th edition by j glenn brookshear and dennis brylow computer science an overview 12th edition chapter 2 review answers computer science an overview 12th edition answers pdf computer science an overview 12th edition chapter review answers computer science an overview 12th answer computer science an overview 12th edition solutions computer science an overview 12th edition answer key computer science an overview 12e test bank test bank computer science an overview 12th edition
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michelsopyq-blog · 7 years ago
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Test Bank for Computer Science An Overview 12th Edition by Glenn Brookshear and  Dennis Brylow
Link full download:http://testbankcollection.com/download/test-bank-for-computer-science-an-overview-12th-edition/ ISBN-13: 978-0133760064 ISBN-10: 0133760065 computer science an overview 12th edition answers computer science an overview 12th edition by j glenn brookshear and dennis brylow computer science an overview 12th edition chapter 2 review answers computer science an overview 12th edition answers pdf computer science an overview 12th edition chapter review answers computer science an overview 12th answer computer science an overview 12th edition solutions computer science an overview 12th edition answer key computer science an overview 12e test bank test bank computer science an overview 12th edition
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torley · 5 years ago
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The start point is the belief that every piano has a story, we will tell that story and then, as part of that narrative, sample the piano to preserve it at that point of its timeline. Christian Henson will then take these samples and mutate them (with the input of this community) into a whole new world of inspiring sounds, textures and instruments.Thanks Brian Brylow for telling me about PIANOBOOK
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ebooks101sm · 5 years ago
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(via Computer Science An Overview 12th Edition by Brookshear Brylow Solution Manual - Home Testbanks and Solutions)
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