Plugs

Plugs are peculiarly intimate objects. Plugs are archaic things, that belong to an economy of spaces in which what mattered was to seal, to store, to quarantine and dam up flow. But now the plug is used for different purposes, to establish connections, and to draw together places and times. Plugs ar...

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Autor principal: Steven Connor
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: University of Edinburgh 2010
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/af2e9f7788544e7897562727c6c351cb
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:af2e9f7788544e7897562727c6c351cb2021-11-23T09:46:00ZPlugs1749-9771https://doaj.org/article/af2e9f7788544e7897562727c6c351cb2010-06-01T00:00:00Zhttp://www.forumjournal.org/article/view/640https://doaj.org/toc/1749-9771Plugs are peculiarly intimate objects. Plugs are archaic things, that belong to an economy of spaces in which what mattered was to seal, to store, to quarantine and dam up flow. But now the plug is used for different purposes, to establish connections, and to draw together places and times. Plugs are scale-transformers: they used to keep proximal things distant, now they bring distant things up close. We use plugs not to keep things apart, but to become a part of them, to plug in rather than plug up. Plugs used to keep things in their place, enforcing a world governed by the prepositions ‘in’, ‘on’ or ‘at’. Now the plug is the enabler of relationships signified by prepositions like ‘through’, ‘across’ and ‘between’. As such, the plug is a prime example of the interference between spatio-temporal dispensations that is so much a feature of the modern world. Perhaps the plug is itself a connector between the archaic and the contemporary.Steven ConnorUniversity of EdinburgharticleFine ArtsNLanguage and LiteraturePENForum, Iss 10, Pp 1-9 (2010)
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collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Fine Arts
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Language and Literature
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spellingShingle Fine Arts
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Language and Literature
P
Steven Connor
Plugs
description Plugs are peculiarly intimate objects. Plugs are archaic things, that belong to an economy of spaces in which what mattered was to seal, to store, to quarantine and dam up flow. But now the plug is used for different purposes, to establish connections, and to draw together places and times. Plugs are scale-transformers: they used to keep proximal things distant, now they bring distant things up close. We use plugs not to keep things apart, but to become a part of them, to plug in rather than plug up. Plugs used to keep things in their place, enforcing a world governed by the prepositions ‘in’, ‘on’ or ‘at’. Now the plug is the enabler of relationships signified by prepositions like ‘through’, ‘across’ and ‘between’. As such, the plug is a prime example of the interference between spatio-temporal dispensations that is so much a feature of the modern world. Perhaps the plug is itself a connector between the archaic and the contemporary.
format article
author Steven Connor
author_facet Steven Connor
author_sort Steven Connor
title Plugs
title_short Plugs
title_full Plugs
title_fullStr Plugs
title_full_unstemmed Plugs
title_sort plugs
publisher University of Edinburgh
publishDate 2010
url https://doaj.org/article/af2e9f7788544e7897562727c6c351cb
work_keys_str_mv AT stevenconnor plugs
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