P-Prompt: Prepositions: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "Revisiting practices of reuse also suggests revisiting the ways we speak about our relationship to creative works. Séverine Dusollier proposed to think through the complexities of legal language and how different understandings of this relationship have different consequences. Riffing on her game with prepositions, we propose you to try out different prepositions, opening possible ways to relate to creative work. Time, position, location, direction.  A remake of the sl...")
 
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Revisiting practices of reuse also suggests revisiting the ways we speak about our relationship to creative works. Séverine Dusollier proposed to think through the complexities of legal language and how different understandings of this relationship have different consequences. Riffing on her game with prepositions, we propose you to try out different prepositions, opening possible ways to relate to creative work. Time, position, location, direction.  A remake of the slogan generator, 2000 by De Geuzen, http://geuzen.org/change.html copying and pasting, view source. http://www.hypergurl.com
 
Séverine Dusollier, a long time close collaborator and inspiration to us, has been working as a lawyer, researcher, and teacher in Paris. With her work on critical approaches to copyright and IP, she brings a particular legal perspective to the project. In the prompt “Prepositions” (Prompt 14) developed for the worksession Revisit Reuse (Brussels, May 2024), she proposes to reconsider the relationship between copyright and collective practice, asking whether a move from the singular to plural pronouns would be sufficient.
 
Building on Severines proposal to think through the complexities of language and its performativities, we
focus here on the ways we speak about our relationship to creative works. Riffing on her game with prepositions and pronouns, we experiment with a range of prepositions that all open up different ways to relate to creative work. Prepositions related to time, position, location and direction.
 
 
propose you to try out different prepositions, opening possible ways to relate to creative work. Time, position, location, direction.  A remake of the slogan generator, 2000 by De Geuzen, http://geuzen.org/change.html copying and pasting, view source. http://www.hypergurl.com

Revision as of 12:16, 4 July 2024

Séverine Dusollier, a long time close collaborator and inspiration to us, has been working as a lawyer, researcher, and teacher in Paris. With her work on critical approaches to copyright and IP, she brings a particular legal perspective to the project. In the prompt “Prepositions” (Prompt 14) developed for the worksession Revisit Reuse (Brussels, May 2024), she proposes to reconsider the relationship between copyright and collective practice, asking whether a move from the singular to plural pronouns would be sufficient.

Building on Severines proposal to think through the complexities of language and its performativities, we focus here on the ways we speak about our relationship to creative works. Riffing on her game with prepositions and pronouns, we experiment with a range of prepositions that all open up different ways to relate to creative work. Prepositions related to time, position, location and direction.


propose you to try out different prepositions, opening possible ways to relate to creative work. Time, position, location, direction.  A remake of the slogan generator, 2000 by De Geuzen, http://geuzen.org/change.html copying and pasting, view source. http://www.hypergurl.com