Intimate Fields: A Kit for E-Literature

This paper discusses the development of Intimate Fields, an installation work that brings together “near field” technologies from markedly different eras to argue that secrecy, absence, and distance are constituting features of felt human intimacy. Looking back to the sixteenth and seventeenth cent...

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Main Authors: Margaret Simon, Helen J. Burgess
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Imprensa da Universidade de Coimbra 2018-08-01
Series:MatLit : Materialidades da Literatura
Subjects:
Online Access:https://impactum-journals.uc.pt/matlit/article/view/5239
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spelling doaj-c58de83a2f534e878a1a9a07c9e33f842021-04-02T17:10:35ZengImprensa da Universidade de CoimbraMatLit : Materialidades da Literatura2182-88302018-08-016210.14195/2182-8830_6-2_14Intimate Fields: A Kit for E-LiteratureMargaret Simon0Helen J. Burgess1North Carolina State UniversityNorth Carolina State University This paper discusses the development of Intimate Fields, an installation work that brings together “near field” technologies from markedly different eras to argue that secrecy, absence, and distance are constituting features of felt human intimacy. Looking back to the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, our project expands to digital technologies the concept of “the posy” and the practice of its creation and dissemination. Posies are short poems designed to be inscribed on gifted objects, most frequently rings. These bespoke accessories are meant to be worn on the body and to signify or transact amorous relations, act as memento mori, or even enable private and subversive modes of religious devotion. Posies and their objects were widely held to act as reminders of intimacy or as portals to memory. At the same time, the inscriptions themselves, particularly on courtship rings, are often generic and were collected and published in printed books for use and adaptation. By inter-animating today’s methods of near field communication and early modern wearables, this project explores how text and code technologies and the languages they carry can create, interrupt, or re-shape interpersonal connection. https://impactum-journals.uc.pt/matlit/article/view/5239e-literaturepoetrynear field technologycraftintimacyBachelard
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Margaret Simon
Helen J. Burgess
spellingShingle Margaret Simon
Helen J. Burgess
Intimate Fields: A Kit for E-Literature
MatLit : Materialidades da Literatura
e-literature
poetry
near field technology
craft
intimacy
Bachelard
author_facet Margaret Simon
Helen J. Burgess
author_sort Margaret Simon
title Intimate Fields: A Kit for E-Literature
title_short Intimate Fields: A Kit for E-Literature
title_full Intimate Fields: A Kit for E-Literature
title_fullStr Intimate Fields: A Kit for E-Literature
title_full_unstemmed Intimate Fields: A Kit for E-Literature
title_sort intimate fields: a kit for e-literature
publisher Imprensa da Universidade de Coimbra
series MatLit : Materialidades da Literatura
issn 2182-8830
publishDate 2018-08-01
description This paper discusses the development of Intimate Fields, an installation work that brings together “near field” technologies from markedly different eras to argue that secrecy, absence, and distance are constituting features of felt human intimacy. Looking back to the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, our project expands to digital technologies the concept of “the posy” and the practice of its creation and dissemination. Posies are short poems designed to be inscribed on gifted objects, most frequently rings. These bespoke accessories are meant to be worn on the body and to signify or transact amorous relations, act as memento mori, or even enable private and subversive modes of religious devotion. Posies and their objects were widely held to act as reminders of intimacy or as portals to memory. At the same time, the inscriptions themselves, particularly on courtship rings, are often generic and were collected and published in printed books for use and adaptation. By inter-animating today’s methods of near field communication and early modern wearables, this project explores how text and code technologies and the languages they carry can create, interrupt, or re-shape interpersonal connection.
topic e-literature
poetry
near field technology
craft
intimacy
Bachelard
url https://impactum-journals.uc.pt/matlit/article/view/5239
work_keys_str_mv AT margaretsimon intimatefieldsakitforeliterature
AT helenjburgess intimatefieldsakitforeliterature
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