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Monday, February 18, 2019

The Distribution of Ink-Printed Text Versus Hypertext :: Internet Net World Wide Web Media

The Distribution of Ink-Printed Text Versus Hyper school textWhile shop Radioheads website (www.radiohead.com) one particular page of hypertext caught my eye. This page displayed was what looked to me like a scanned-in assume of ink-print text, which read How To Construct a Dadaist Poem by Tristan Tzara. I had hear of Dadaism previous to this discovery, but hadnt the slightest idea about the man who had authored these naive instructions on how to construct a dadaist poem. So with the help of my abstract and keyboard I quickly erased the Radiohead URL (Internet address) and typed in that of a search engine wished Hotbot (www.hotbot.com). After arriving at the homepage for Hotbot I typed my inquiry into the empty search case and the search engine immediately displayed a list of related homepages and topics on Tristan Tzara. I clicked on the first result entitled Tzara which led me to the homepage of The outside(a) Dada Archive.In reading-over the summary and history of the Dada artistic gesture of the early twentieth century I began to see that many of its characteristic characteristics are the same characteristics found at the core of Radioheads artistic effort both groups, the Dadaists and Radiohead had/have an affinity for assaulting cultural set through croak performances, and the distributing of leaflets, magazines, and newspapers. However, Radiohead has recently replaced the older method of distributing leaflets, magazines, and newspapers with the newer method of simply posting a website on the World Wide Web. Now, if an admirer or audience constituent wants to read Radioheads poetry or view their latest artwork they exclusively have to type Radioheads URL (www.radiohead.com) into any browser and instantly it is delivered to the hiding of their personal computer.The Dadaists and Radiohead both had/have an affinity for assaulting cultural values or in other words presenting their audience members with present-day cultural values in a way that made/makes those cultural values expect mundane. The Dadaists attacked cultural values through different types of live performances. The real aim of Dada was in events cabaret performances, demonstrations, declarations, confrontations, the distribution of leaflets and of small magazines and newspapers... and actions which today we would call guerrilla theater. The Dadaists used a combination of live performance and the passing-out of ink-printed text on leaflets, magazines and newspapers to accomplish what they termed ...undermining and exposing what they saw as the stale cultural conventions of a decayed European Civilization... (Shipe, International Dada Archive IDA).

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