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Post by Jenny on Aug 29, 2018 10:11:58 GMT -5
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Post by heidini on Aug 29, 2018 11:30:27 GMT -5
Heaven is a place on Earth! What an awesome find. How exciting!
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Post by Jenny on Aug 29, 2018 12:30:45 GMT -5
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Post by mikemarcum879 on Aug 29, 2018 13:11:59 GMT -5
There's that word "WARM."
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Post by heidini on Aug 29, 2018 15:58:55 GMT -5
erasures.
That stuck out to me. It has a few kind of neat meanings.
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Post by drpepperwood on Aug 30, 2018 0:01:59 GMT -5
erasures. That stuck out to me. It has a few kind of neat meanings. ff hid letters within letters.
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Post by drpepperwood on Aug 30, 2018 0:04:35 GMT -5
erasures. That stuck out to me. It has a few kind of neat meanings. ff hid letters within letters. Is the tc hidden in the poem? Is Brown the title? Maybe that's why Brown is capitalized.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Aug 30, 2018 2:13:28 GMT -5
I have a few meanings for the erasures, sure. Obliteration is my fav alt-def of the term. What stuck out to me was the map and the lack of details pertaining to it. What year is the map? Who made the map? What area or areas are on the map? Where did Bob get the map? Was Forrest involved with the map being in the book?
"I worked from information I had collected on 5″ x 7″ cards." "Three years and many erasures later, I had about 85,000 words." "Several edits and the manuscript was reduced to about 65,000 words." "9 books" "Beat" "$750" "250 color plates"
Imo, the information shared after the release is more relevant to the search than the original answer.
Erasure is a form of found poetry or found object art created by erasing words from an existing text in prose or verse and framing the result on the page as a poem.
Anthropologist Michael Powell writes: "While the literal act of redaction attempts to extract information and eradicate meaning, the black marker actually transforms the way we read these documents, sparking curiosity and often stirring skeptical, critical, and even cynical readings. As redacted government documents make their way from government bureaus into the hands of citizens, a peculiar transformation seems to take place, one that seems to create a paranoia within reason."
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Post by mikemarcum879 on Aug 30, 2018 6:13:52 GMT -5
I have a few meanings for the erasures, sure. Obliteration is my fav alt-def of the term. What stuck out to me was the map and the lack of details pertaining to it. What year is the map? Who made the map? What area or areas are on the map? Where did Bob get the map? Was Forrest involved with the map being in the book? "I worked from information I had collected on 5″ x 7″ cards." "Three years and many erasures later, I had about 85,000 words." "Several edits and the manuscript was reduced to about 65,000 words." "9 books" "Beat" "$750" "250 color plates" Imo, the information shared after the release is more relevant to the search than the original answer. Erasure is a form of found poetry or found object art created by erasing words from an existing text in prose or verse and framing the result on the page as a poem. Anthropologist Michael Powell writes: "While the literal act of redaction attempts to extract information and eradicate meaning, the black marker actually transforms the way we read these documents, sparking curiosity and often stirring skeptical, critical, and even cynical readings. As redacted government documents make their way from government bureaus into the hands of citizens, a peculiar transformation seems to take place, one that seems to create a paranoia within reason." abravefable. Do you deal with cartoons I ask because of your name you go by. It looks like you are in the TTOTC. hard with all that information you post it does make sense.
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Post by drpepperwood on Aug 30, 2018 17:39:37 GMT -5
I have a few meanings for the erasures, sure. Obliteration is my fav alt-def of the term. What stuck out to me was the map and the lack of details pertaining to it. What year is the map? Who made the map? What area or areas are on the map? Where did Bob get the map? Was Forrest involved with the map being in the book? "I worked from information I had collected on 5″ x 7″ cards." "Three years and many erasures later, I had about 85,000 words." "Several edits and the manuscript was reduced to about 65,000 words." "9 books" "Beat" "$750" "250 color plates" Imo, the information shared after the release is more relevant to the search than the original answer. Erasure is a form of found poetry or found object art created by erasing words from an existing text in prose or verse and framing the result on the page as a poem. Anthropologist Michael Powell writes: "While the literal act of redaction attempts to extract information and eradicate meaning, the black marker actually transforms the way we read these documents, sparking curiosity and often stirring skeptical, critical, and even cynical readings. As redacted government documents make their way from government bureaus into the hands of citizens, a peculiar transformation seems to take place, one that seems to create a paranoia within reason." Awe you say the key word. Erasures. Have you read the book of Lewis Carroll? I have and that word is on page xxii. Paying attention to the nouns in the poem and blackout the pages TTOTC one just might be able to marry the poem to the map. The map is the Erasures Art. Blackout pages of TTOTC is the poem. Example: No Place For The Biddies (No place for the meek). The words in the poem where place strategically for a reason. Is it difficult? Yes. Is it impossible? No.
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Post by drpepperwood on Aug 30, 2018 17:56:37 GMT -5
Forgot to add that Found Poem in Gatsby. FF's poem is a Erasure of his book or books. I believe it is TTOTC since he says read my poem over and over again. Read the book again but more slowly. The key word is Erasures IMO. Maybe even when one starts applying the method maybe a picture will pop up on the map?
One day I was sitting under my mesquite tree in my yard and reading TFTW. The black tar or sap of the mesquite tree fell onto my page I was reading. When I had wiped it away so did the letters from the pages. True story!!! In my own backyard. I had created a Erasures.
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