Thursday, May 30, 2019
Making New Writing :: Personal Narrative
Making New Writing This naming is for my Writing, Style, and Technology class at University. The centering of the class is supposed to be on computers, Internet, etc. But for our first major project, the goal was to create a parvenu type of theme technology. The perplex was that we couldnt use common writing tools like paper or pencils. We had to use natural items and things we could find around the house like food, paper clips, dirt, etc. And the absolute work was to be a word or brief sentence using that new technology. The idea was to act as an writing inventor and f are an understanding of the thoughts and processes that went into making some of the common writing technologies used today. M whatever of those evolved from using items in ways that werent originally intended. For example, the first computers were originally used for labyrinthine math calculations and not for word processing, until later adaptations against the desires of many early computer operators who th ought making letters as too simple (Baron 46). That was the idea for this assignment making words with tools not normally used to write with and to temporarily get beyond the normal practices we grew up with to understand how people in the past felt with the introduction of new writing practices. The first instruction that got stuck in my head when the assignment was first presented was the one about not using any man-made things. Going outside in the cold/snow and digging up natural tools wasnt a pleasant idea. But history has shown that making new writing technologies often turns into a dirty process. In 18th century French, pencil-maker Nicholas-Jacques Conte had to deal with pencil graphite shortages by creating his own mixture of graphite and another(prenominal) material like clay and water (Baron 44). Replaying a task like that didnt sound very fun. But I probably wasnt paying enough caution in class when the assignment was first talked about to realize that it wasnt that l imiting. After carefully reading the instructions, it appeared that man made items *could* be used, but not ones that are extensions of common writing tools (paint, nail polish). That was a relieving realization. Going in nature was then ruled out for weather reasons, and the search for a new writing technology began at home. My room was filled with papers, pens, and other school stuff, so searching there wouldnt have done any good.
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