Dr. Stacy Cacciatore

book review

Heuretics – Ulmer – Notes

April 23, 2019 by stacy Leave a Comment

Heuretics – Ulmer Analogy. The method becomes an invention when it relies on analogy and chance (Buchler, 14). If methods tend to be practiced as algorithms, their invention is heuristic (heuretics is a heuristic approach to theory). To help invent the dialectic, Plato relies on “The Manifesto of Surrealism,” and for that matter all of the manifestos of the avant-garde, belong to the tradition of the discourse on method. A comparison of Breton’s manifesto with the various classics of the method reveals that they tend to include a common set of elements, which are representable for mnemonic reference by the acronym CATTt (Ulmer, 1991b). The CATTt includes the following operations: C = Contrast (opposition, inversion, differentiation) A Analogy (figuration, displacement) T = Theory (repetition, literalization) T Target (application, purpose) t = Tale (secondary elaboration, representability)   Writing as technology is a memory machine, with each apparatus finding different means to collect, store, and retrieve information outside of any one individual mind (in rituals, habits, libraries, or databases). Part of the contribution of hypermedia as The target for my method is the models of memory developed for it, inasmuch as individuals and societies tend to internalize as forms of reasoning the operations of their tools. The current state of computer interface design, then, may hold some valuable lessons for Derridean heuretics.   What is our relationship with technology, language and memory – writing in the margins, taking notes on the computer, blog, evernote…   r grammatology, hypermedia is the technological aspect of an ele~tronic apparatus (referring to an i~teractive matrix of technology, institutional practices, and ideological subject formation). My interest is not only in the technology itself but also in the problem of inventing the practices that may institutionalize electronics in terms of schooling.   These practices are not medium specific: rather, they entail a revision of the liberal arts trivium (grammar, rhetoric, logic) open to writing on a screen as well_ as on paper. It may be that eventually, the screen will replace the page (and the database replace the library) as the support of all academic work.   Used to not allow Google, now – source data, The practice of inventing … [Read more…]

Posted in: Book Summary, Ph.D Digital Portfolio, Ulmer Tagged: book review, heuretics, ulmer

The Association of Small Bombs Book Review

April 23, 2019 by stacy Leave a Comment

The Association of Small Bombs by Karan Mahajan By Stacy Cacciatore The Association of Small Bombs by Karan Mahajan is a fascinating novel that centers on a bomb that goes off in the Delhi marketplace in 1996. This “small bomb”, which kills approximately 50 people, isn’t a huge event that gets discussed in the media … [Read more…]

Posted in: Book Reviews, Masters Degree Tagged: book review, karn mahajan, the association of small bombs

While the City Slept Book Review

April 23, 2019 by stacy Leave a Comment

While the City Slept by Eli Sanders By Stacy Cacciatore This book was written by a journalist who wrote about the murder of two women in 2009 by a young man who was mentally disturbed. The opening scene was riveting and the description of the scream, red house and white curtain billowing out of the window … [Read more…]

Posted in: Book Reviews, Masters Degree Tagged: book review, while the city slept

Book Review – Tasteful Domesticity by Sarah Walden

April 21, 2019 by stacy Leave a Comment

In Tasteful Domesticity, Sarah Walden explores the scholarship on cookbooks and how they’ve served as a rhetorical space for women in nineteenth-century America. She claims that Tasteful Domesticity is the first book-length study of women’s rhetoric in American cookbooks (13). Walden posits that cookbooks not only “satisfy Aristotle’s famous definition of rhetoric as ‘locating the … [Read more…]

Posted in: Book Reviews, Ph.D Digital Portfolio Tagged: book review, rhetoric, tasteful domesticity

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