A quote from Marshall McLuhan during a live television broadcast, 1977

Marginal Conversations[edit]

Abstract of workshop[edit]

We read texts, and write notes in the margins; usually in private, isolated from other readers. We come across texts with others' notes on them; the author unknown, their thoughts obscure. What happens when we share our notes, vocalise and perform them?

In this workshop...we'll read, annotate and discuss an open letter which asks for pirate library practices to come out from the shadows. We'll read aloud and perform parts of the text, enriched by our doubts, sympathies, tensions and diverse understandings. We'll personalise the text, opening it up for collective conversations. Our voices will occupy the space and leave traces on the text and in the library.

Plan[edit]

INTRODUCTION (5min)
Meet each other: have a quick round of saying something about ourselves and what do we know about pirate/shadow libraries. Short description of the steps of the workshop and let people know we'll be recording.

Overview of what happens in this workshop in one sentence:

1st part: Reading/Annotating, heatmap
2nd part: Discussion, Rehearsal of Performative reading and recording of performance.


Topic: pirate libraries - topic of special Issue 9
Text: "In solidarity with Library Genesis & Sci-Hub" letter
Aim: 2-3 sentences of what is the aim of this workshop. Why this collective reading-conversations matter?

- We see "annotations" as a way to express our understandings/questions/comments/disagreements/ tensions/positions about what we read. So we can discuss about it and form a collective understanding of the text. Our aims are to:

- open up a conversation about pirate libraries, through a deeper collective understanding of a specific text that refers to this topic (enrichment comes through collectively reading and annotating the text)

- develop ways in which texts can become conversations through annotating together

- make public what we have learned about pirate libraries and annotation, and to reflect on the public's response(s)


STEP 1: Reading/Annotating (15min) PALOMA
Materials: "In Support of Library Genesis & Sci-Hub" English language letter (on A3 spread), A3 tracing paper, ballpoint pens (annotation pack)
Participants: Individual
Archiving step: collect tracing paper, carbon paper

- We provide the solidarity letter in an A3 pack

- Read the text individually

- Annotate the text in English. (It will be traced through carbon paper to the tracing paper underneath.)


STEP 2: Heatmap and discussion through the annotations (20min) SIMON
Materials: Same as Step 1
Participants: Whole group/Small groups
Archiving step: Photographs of annotated texts, discussion

Create a "heatmap" of the text by placing tracing papers with annotations on top of each other, showing which areas are interesting/remarkable to others.


a) we all agree on

b) we don't understand

c) disagree on

d) we want to develop further

e) think are worth repeating/recording


STEP 3: Performative reading (20min) ARTEMIS
Participants: All together (if more than 10, divide into two groups???)
Materials: Annotated "In Support of Library Genesis & Sci-Hub" letter, audio recording device (ZOOM rented from WdKA shop/smartphone), (maybe speakers?)
Archiving step: Voice recording


OUTPUT:
At Leeszaal:

Later:


POST-WORKSHOP MATERIAL:

https://static1.squarespace.com/static/583ae0a12994ca4dbbf813f6/t/58572e856a49634cd5602264/1531923111860
Annotations on Stuart Hall's Encoding, Decoding