Ok. I've finished the manifesto and scanned the rest of the comments in the thread. First thought - I have my work cut out for me. Some homework to do. Do I want to do it? Yeeeesss? I'm lost on some concepts. I think that comes at least partly from the fact that I am not experienced in interpretation because of the whole hating thing, you know. And also because of my tendency to focus on the experience of art rather than the understanding of it. More on that later.
I hope you don't mind, but I'm going to come at this piecemeal. I'll comment on the manifesto from where I stand now. Then I'll need to go on with later posts in the thread and some of the homework you've provided.
I just finished a book about “conceptual reconstructionism,” — thaumasnot
At first, I thought you meant you had just finished reading it, but turns out you wrote it.
Conceptual reconstructionism can be seen as a style of interpretation (of art and various other types of content) that consciously avoids value judgments and focuses on the “reconstruction” of works, which is the process of looking at (and transcribing) what I call their “medium-specific narratives.” The main motivation is a dissatisfaction with reviewing and analysis in general and how they fail to capture a certain uniqueness in certain works. — thaumasnot
Some background - I am not a sophisticated art user. I enjoy music and visual art, but I don't have much of a musical or visual imagination. I am very verbal and have a vivid verbal imagination, so I'm much more at home in discussions of writing. I want to lay out my understanding of meaning in relation to works of art. I don't think they are particularly relevant to your subject, but I want to describe them briefly so you can see where I'm coming from. I don't expect to go on in that direction because I think it might sidetrack your thread, which I don't want to do. It's your job as the original poster to keep us on track. I'll try to help, or at least not to hurt.
I remember a fun trip to the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston with a friend of mine, a visual artist. Lots to look at, most of it non-representational. I started a conversation with him about something I had been thinking about for a while. One of the museum guides came over and we had an interesting discussion. I laid out my thoughts - Art, of any sort, doesn't mean anything beyond the experience the viewer/reader gets from it. You can't turn art into words, even verbal art like poetry or literature. Interpretation, review, whatever you want to call it can only legitimately address the viewer's/reader's experience. Ok, enough of that. You at least to see how that colors my understanding of your views.
Under careful examination, the description is a grab-bag of geographical, economical, political, cultural and demographical considerations which give rise to a mosaic. That is, it is based on juxtaposition rather than other types of relation (temporal order, cause-effect, deduction, formal similarity, etc.). It characteristically builds up into a familiar “messy” whole: while it is conventional and reads well, the mosaic typically doesn’t have a clear direction, — thaumasnot
I love Wikipedia and the mosaic you are describing. It gives me just what I want. I'm your average user. I have specific types of information I'm generally looking for and it's good when I find it where I'm expecting to be. If I need to go further, which is not often, I'm capable of doing that on my own. From what you've written, I don't think you disagree with this.
Consuming reviews and interpretations can be:
1. for information
2. for pleasure
The mosaic suits the consumption for information. — thaumasnot
I commented on this in my first post. I agree that this isn't what I'm looking for in a review.
In the context of the consumption for pleasure, we enjoy the work’s content united to the mosaic of interpretation, although the connection has a fundamentally conjectural quality. Take the live performance of a song. The enjoyment of the song is heightened by the belief in a certain connection to the musicians, the technicality of their performance, how they seem to enjoy themselves too, etc. Even if the connection is real, the conjecturing is always in the background: the audience always has to transcend a fundamental doubt, however small, regarding the connection (playback, autotune, whether the performance is that difficult to pull off, and so on). — thaumasnot
You say "enjoyment," I say "experience." I think we're probably talking mostly about the same thing, although experience might include a bit more. I'm not sure. The factors you identify probably would contribute to the experience for me, although I think there would be lots of other factors. I probably won't be aware of them unless I'm really trying to understand my reactions to the piece.
A notable labelling act is the value judgment. A statement such as “I like this work” is always a highly compromised abstraction of a rich experience. It tries to cram a more or less unique cognitive process into one quantity (informal or numerical, it doesn’t matter). — thaumasnot
Sure, if value judgement is all there is. On the other hand, why would I interpret something that wasn't at least interesting? I write reviews on Amazon, Yelp, or Chowhound from time to time, almost all for things I have strong feelings about or interest in. I've been known to end a review with "I love this book."
The interpretation of the average value doesn’t match the actual experiencing of content, which is a process with a narrative quality. Not narrative in the sense of a traditional story, but in a medium-specific sense. For example, if the medium is painting, a medium-specific narrative is based on visual perceptions (“events”) and how they relate to each other (through morphology, color, transformation, topology, etc.) on a timeline affixed to the viewer’s roaming gaze. Even in a text-based medium, a medium-specific narrative doesn’t always coincide with the traditional concept of story or plot. That’s because medium-specific specificity isn’t so much about what the words mean, but how they are told. — thaumasnot
I'm interested in this, especially in media where I am not familiar with technical aspects. I know that bluegrass and old time country music sound and feel different, but what is it about them that makes that difference? For visual art, I'm even less knowledgeable about the technical aspects of the work. Even for written works where I am more comfortable, I am not usually paying attention to these aspects unless I make a special effort or unless someone points them out.
The interpretation of the medium-specific narrative restores the granularity, temporality and epiphanic quality of content... Reconstruction is a product of the interpretation of the medium-specific narratives. It consists in transcribing a medium-specific narrative perceived in a work. — thaumasnot
I'm trying to figure out what, exactly, this means. As I said, I think I have work to do.
The interest of reconstruction is in pushing the scope of the perceived narrative to the physical boundaries of the medium. — thaumasnot
I need to see some examples. I see you have provided at least one in later posts. That's the homework.
Reconstruction is based on 2 conventions... Conventional medium delimitation... Pure referentiality — thaumasnot
I don't understand. I will probably have more to say once I've read some examples.
The mosaic, as a format of content, is just one symptom of amnesic thought processes that forget narrative relations, leading to a simplistic interpretation of information and reality, with unfortunate philosophical and cultural consequences like excessive vulgarization and false lifestyle dichotomies (for example, being a commercially successful mainstream artist versus staying “authentic” and underground). In particular, value-based interpretation creates artificial communication barriers that become social barriers. Role segregation is a consequence of the opacity of value judgments (e.g., a renowned critic’s opinion is unfalsifiable but considered authoritative), and feeds into an inferiority complex. It paints “great” artists as geniuses, and “great” critics as authority figures. — thaumasnot
This gets at a question a lot of unsophisticated people like me have about art. Sure, the Mona Lisa is a nice painting about a pretty woman. What's so great about it. Or maybe - Hey, that's just a bunch of squiggles. My 3 year old son could do that. Maybe that's my problem with interpretation. I've read very few whose judgement matches my understanding, experience, of wonderfulness.
With the focus of interpretation moving away from value judgments, not only do the critics lose all their privileges, but the gravity center of communities, now educated on on the sterile and manipulative aspects of value, shifts to the sharing of perceived content. Let me quote a random thread about a game on a gaming forum: — thaumasnot
As I've written, you and I have a somewhat different opinion about value judgements, but I do know what you're talking about. I read a lot and spend a lot of time on Amazon. Amazon ratings and reviews of books are practically useless. Most books get 4.5 or 5 stars, even crap. Then some of my favorites, well written and meaningful, get 3.5 stars. If I want to see what's really going on with a book, I always read the 3 star reviews and then look for outside reviews from reputable sources.
The focus on experiencing individual works and what makes each unique (as medium-specific narratives rather than consumerist novelties based on aesthetics, theme, and so on) directly contradicts the need for grand theories (what is Art, what is great Art, etc.). Reconstruction isn’t so much a theory as the cognitive process of finding medium-specific narratives. — thaumasnot
Sounds good. That goal is similar to mine for focusing on the experience of a work of art rather than it's meaning. Sometimes in reading what you've written, I think maybe we are getting at something similar. Sometimes I think we are far apart.
See now, this is all tl:dr, but that's your fault, isn't it. I'll PM you to discuss.