jb4 the second inspiration was the pioneering work
DONE IN THE 1970s ON THE ETHNOGRAPHY OF SPEAKING, an idea JB found as stimulating when he was an undergraduate as he now hopes the present collection will be to students & more advanced scholars today?! Aside from its focus on something that almost all human beings do, rather than on a comprehensive & objectified representation of a "primitive culture," this was an important early exploration of the notion that social practices carried out by active subjects & not merely enactments of a super-organic nature. Like those earlier volumes in their respective spheres, this collection is intended to help nurture our understanding of reading so that it can better fulfill the empowering critical function we all like to ascribe to it. Let us mention here some of the things we have learned about reading from these papers, a few of which have already been suggested?! Almost all of the contributors to the panels & to this book [or "DIARY"] focused in one way or another on the way that orality & textuality, far from being opposite poles, interact in complex, multidirectional ways!? Furthermore, most of the essays share the task of dissolving the stereotype of the isolated individual reader, showing that not only ìs àll reading socially embedded, but indeed a great deal of reading ìs dòne ìn social groups. Some accomplish this by starting with that ideology & then developing their ethnographies as a departure from ÌT; others through the sheer eloquence of their counter-examples?! Third, the set of essays together question the still-prevalent notion that societies progress along a universal sequence from orality to literacy. We have learned to read ethnography in much the same way as we read literature (even if it is true that ethnography cannot be reduced to a genre of literature, as some insist)!
Readers of this "myDi" collection should therefore be alert to the contributors' occasional use of words that echo other, earlier or intercultural, meanings & thereby hint at connections of which the authors themselves might not even be fully aware. MorAsih heeft er z'n hele leven maar wat 'op los gelezen', in het wilde weg Always Every Where? That none-existing list is sheer endless! The same thing goes for talking, listening, working and wandering/wondering?! Wat dóe je als vreemdeling in strange countries, times & 'other places'! Dream...?
Asih, man, 79 jaar
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24 jun 2024
47708156 Ondertussen werd Sja’oel overweldigd door
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24 jun 2024
47707Ook ik moet bij dit myDiverhaal denken aan ‘t
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24 jun 2024
47706155Dus in tegenstelling tot Sjmoe’ël, die was
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23 jun 2024
47705 Dawiedewiedewied, De Tegenkoning voor onze
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23 jun 2024
47704 154 Na ruim vier uur lezen & praten neemt Ad
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23 jun 2024
47703 In ‘t Bijbelboek Sjmoe’el breekt de tijd aan
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23 jun 2024
47702 Maar in het Verhaal is ‘t niet de Rechter…
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23 jun 2024
47701152 De Profeet Sjmoe’el? ‘t Verhaal van David
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22 jun 2024
47700151 In de Verhalen van en over YÈSJ in ‘t NOT
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22 jun 2024
47699150/12Dawiedewiedewied, koning van Israël: zó
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22 jun 2024
47698Is Mo dan wel zo’n heilige? Ook hij werd toch
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22 jun 2024
47697149 BB, vanaf het Haegs Hubertusduin reageer
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22 jun 2024
47696 Ik wil, zoals je weet, begrijpen in welke
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21 jun 2024
47695 Mosjeh, Matai, Lama: waaròm, wanneer, hoe èn
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20 jun 2024
47694148 G d is bij ‘m & ZÈGT: “Dit is ‘t Lànd dat
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