دانلود کتاب [Article] Biological Processes as Writerly_Ecological Critique of DNA-based Poetry
by John Charles Ryan
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عنوان فارسی: [مقاله] فرآیندهای بیولوژیکی به عنوان Writerly_Ecological نقد DNA مبتنی بر شعر |
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جزییات کتاب
While the origin of biopoetry tends to be attributed to the late 1990s work of bioartist Kac (b. 1962), a number of influential mid-twentieth-century precursors and events have impacted the course of the genre. Building on the 1980s advent of digital poetry and the personal computer as both a compositional tool and a writing environment, Kac devised the term biopoetry to signify “poetry in vivo” that makes “use of biotechnology and living organisms in poetry as a new realm of verbal, paraverbal, and non-verbal creation.” Similarly, in the same manifesto, he proposes the idea of transgenic poetry to denote the possibility of a practice of writing based on synthesizing DNA for constructing words, sentences, and sequences of poetry in correspondence to nucleotide combinations.
At the center of biopoetic works is the process known as encipherment and its pivot to genetic coding. The term cipher derives from the Old French cifre, for “nought or zero,” and signifies the mathematical symbol for absence of quantity or value. In the 1520s, cipher first came to denote, in English, a secret manner of writing involving a coded message. Accordingly, cipher refers to “a cryptographic system in which units of text of regular length, usually letters, are transposed or substituted according to a predetermined code.” In a modern context, a cipher is an algorithm for performing encryption—or encipherment, a less common synonym—and decryption. The cipher of modern genetics is foreshadowed in the Pythagorean belief in numerical codes as integral to unlocking—or decrypting—the perceived phenomena of the world.
Regardless of the technically elaborate (though, for general audiences, largely cryptic) process developed, the tenor is unavoidably human: for instance, the distinctly Western modes of melancholic internally rhyming alexandrine and Petrarchan sonnets. Perhaps it is a matter of the poets’ claims making. Construing a bacterium and the biological processes of which it is part as writerly or a poem in itself as a microorganism or vice versa could strike discordantly with the pataphysical domain of playful linguistic experimentation and conceptualism. For Benjamin, “there is no happening, no entity in either organic or inorganic nature that does not participate in some sense in language.” Recognizing the immanence of expression in all things, he argues against the reduction of the language of things to mere human language or to convenient metaphor. Rather than being etched in the architecture of language as we exercise it, the language of things exists at the limit of the sayable and nameable. One might, then, wish to know, impatiently, the nature of the language of D. radiodurans, other microorganisms, and other-than-human forms of life for that matter.