The data (e)speaks
From Algolit
Type: | Algoliterary exploration |
Datasets: | |
Technique: | espeak |
Developed by: | & Algolit |
In the process of making the Algolit datasets, careful consideration was given to the selection of the source texts. Our attempt was to have a variety of tone of voices that highlights the heterogeneity of all of them combined.
The texts were gathered from aaaaarg.fail, gen.lib.rus.ec, archive.org and gutenberg.org, run through terminal commands such as pdftotext in order to generate .txt files and stripped of punctuation marks with the help of a Python code snippet.
The ensuing datasets are:
The data (e)speaks is an audio installation that gives a voice to the datasets by selecting specific sentences from the text body.
- Dataset: astroBlackness. Source: Octavia E. Butler. Author: Gerry Canavan. Publisher: University of Illinois Press. Year: 2016. Page: 145. Paragraph: 3.
She returned over and over again to world-building aspects of the narrative — the social organization of the colony, the physics governing Bow, the possible organisms that might live in such a place, Earth-historical parallels to their situation—but could never get the plot itself to gel.
- Dataset: astroBlackness. Source: Octavia E. Butler. Author: Gerry Canavan. Publisher: University of Illinois Press. Year: 2016. Page: 151. Paragraph: 3.
Bow was a place where history wasn’t the unhappy curse we were condemned to, a place where the tug-of-war between collective survival and collective insanity might play itself out in another way.
- Dataset: astroBlackness. Source: Octavia E. Butler. Author: Gerry Canavan. Publisher: University of Illinois Press. Year: 2016. Page: 186. Paragraph: 3.
More important than technique, however, is for authors to remember that they are writing about people. Authors who forget this, who do not relax and get comfortable with their racially different characters, can wind up creating unbelievable, self-consciously manipulated puppets; pieces of furniture who exist within a story but contribute nothing to it; or stereotypes guaranteed to be offensive.
- Dataset: astroBlackness. Source: Octavia E. Butler. Author: Gerry Canavan. Publisher: University of Illinois Press. Year: 2016. Page: 46. Paragraph: 5.
The sole competitor to the unchallenged hegemony of the Patternists, beyond the social instability implied by their own endless internal struggle for dominance, comes in the form of the Clayarks, mutated humans sick from an interplanetary virus, who are partially immune to Patternist control and who exist in the wild spaces between Patternist enclaves.
- Dataset: astroBlackness. Source: Social Text - Afrofuturist Issue. Author: Tracie Morris. Publisher: Duke University Press. Year: 2002. Page: 93. Paragraph: 1.
My first word was an error
according to the machine I spoke it in.
Whispering into an orifice used to be intimate,
Now, the Neural Network Noir twitters from every misplaced
exclamation. Deep spell check.
- Dataset: astroBlackness. Source: The Immeasurable Equation. Author: Sun Ra. Publisher: Hartmut Geerken. Year: 2005. Page: 306.
· = aim
· = end
· = period
· = time
· = era
· = age
· = cycle
- Dataset: nearbySaussure. Source: The Cambridge Companion to Saussure. Author: Peter Wunderli. Publisher: Cambridge University Press. Year: 2006. Page: 21. Paragraph: 3.
All these concessions open the door to coincidence and finally turn the anagram into a phenomenon of probability. In the end one is left wondering whether it is not possible to extract any word out of any text of a certain length.
- Dataset: nearbySaussure'. Source: Saussure, Derrida, and the Metaphysics of Subjectivity. Author: Robert M. Strozier. Publisher: Mouton de Gruyter. Year: 1988. Page: 21. Paragraph: 3’.
"the linguist's task is not to study utterances for their own sake . . . but to provide evidence about the nature of the underlying system, the English language"
- Dataset: nearbySaussure'. Source: Saussure, Derrida, and the Metaphysics of Subjectivity. Author: Robert M. Strozier. Publisher: Mouton de Gruyter. Year: 1988. Page: 49. Paragraph: 2’.
It is the point of view, as Saussure says, which determines the fact or entity--the object--within the mass of data. "Point of view" is a technical term for Saussure: it is another term for form; that is, the form represents what is induced upon the mass of data, now considered as a material capable of accepting the various forms.
- Dataset: nearbySaussure'. Source: Saussure's Philosophy of Language as Phenomenology. Author: Beata Stawarska. Publisher: Oxford University Press. Year: 2015. Page: 43. Paragraph: 1’.
Temporality proper to language itself intersects the signifier and the signified in a relation of mutual interdependency; this naturally makes the ideas themselves subject to mutation and change. Importantly, the source materials do not support the structuralist notion of a fixed and immutable system; such a notion emerges rather as the philosophers’ abstraction removed from the concrete reality of language in usage;