Entries Tagged ‘print media’

The Journal of Ordinary Blog

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

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If you are familiar with the Journal of Ordinary Thought (JOT), then their infamous mantra, “Every person is a philosopher,” goes without saying.  In today’s two-dimensional world the adage holds true. From the informational thresholds of the internet and every “www” we enter into our browsers, it seems like everyone is writing.  I mean it’s clear that blogging has become a somewhat acceptable form of creative venting.  People post everything from daily meanderings to poetry collections and short stories.  The fact remains, for better or worse, the internet is lending people a peculiar voice.

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Two with Water <3 Print and Embrace Digital

Sunday, July 25th, 2010

Hello word lovers,

My name is Amy, and I am part of a Chicago lit/art magazine called Two With Water. We may have met at the Chicago Underground Library’s Son of Science of Obscurity event where I probably coerced you into playing a mad-libs game on an overhead projector. Not only did we concoct some intriguing, oxymoronic double entendres, but we learned something too. We learned to expand our mindsets beyond the limitations of superficial language and appropriate word choices. Two With Water, a _______ magazine, uses such a “tagline” because we encourage you- clever readers and writers- to think for yourselves and say what you please! (Stay tuned for photos and text examples.)

But the other thing I wanted to mention is this whole Printers’ Ball coming up!  The theme “Print <3 Digital” got me thinking about TWW’s publishing experience…

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Ryerson & Burnham Comics Collection

Sunday, July 25th, 2010

Gag Hag, Jeffrey Brown, Lyonel Feininger, Daniel Clowes’ Eightball, Bijou Funnies, The Hairy Who

Joe Tallarico works at the Ryerson & Burnham Library. He was able to take some time out of his busy schedule to show me a few examples of comics from the collection with strong ties to Chicago. I was given more or less a chronological run-down of the works that he pulled from the Ryerson’s collection, starting with comic strips from the turn of the century and working up to today’s big names like Daniel Clowes and Jeffrey Brown.

Full article and more photos!

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The Best Thing You’ve Never Read

Monday, July 19th, 2010

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Light Quarterly has been publishing smart, funny, satirical, and unserious poetry from some of the best American writers around for the past 18 years. We’ve counted John Updike, Tom Disch and Richard Moore among our contributors. We’re based in Forest Park, just west of the city, and we became a nonprofit organization called the Foundation for Light Verse in late 2008. Since gaining 501 (c) (3) status, we’ve expanded our mission and vision to include outreach activities such as free poetry readings in our community and workshops to engage school-age children in the fun of playing with language.

So why haven’t you heard of us? Read on for the rest…

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Call for Submissions: Paper Blog Blitz

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

The Chicago Underground Library editors (Meredith, Thùy, Eric) have explored the idea of having a Paper Blog in the past during one of our brainstorming blog meetings. Meredith pointed out the seeming irony of being a physical repository that preserves print materials, and the fact that we were using a virtual media, a blog, to spread the word. So how about a Paper Blog?

Click for more and submission details!

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The Answer? 42.

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

Greetings my fellow: bibliophiles, paper/book/print artists!

To celebrate this year’s Printer’s Ball theme, Print <3 Digital, I thought I’d write a series of entries on my personal favorite printmaking technique, letterpress printing. The digital age has revolutionized printmaking once again: multiples have never been easier to produce, color matching is automated for ease and accuracy, and your paper can even be cut all at once with a mechanized, digitally guided guillotine.

The debate stands: Expediency is good. Modern is good. Old is good, too. But now is better than then. So, which is better? Printing now, or printing then? Rather than answer that question I will offer the history of printing, specifically how letterpress printing has changed through the ages and touch on its role in Chicago. Neither better or worse, good or bad, your Epson or Canon is an extension, a family member to the Chandler and Price printing presses that used to line the streets of Printer’s Row.

Find out more about the history of printing and the #42…

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“Death of Print:” Life (and Archiving) Inside the Paradigm Shift

Monday, February 1st, 2010

I recently spoke to my friend Colin Horgan about the CUL for a True/Slant article he was writing, and the conversation turned, as conversations often do, to the practical and metaphysical questions raised by the differences between online and print media.

Specifically, what happens to literature as part of an ever-changing community landscape when it becomes, via the web, geographically non-specific? How does this affect an organization like the CUL, whose mission is “to map the evolution (historically and contemporaneously) of Chicago’s communities and movements and encourage the production of new media by providing context, inspiration, and programming designed to support collaboration?” The internet provides a convenient, free-or-cheap alternative to zine making, book making, and small-press printing in the form of blogging. The blog or website format offers not only a more economical, environmentally-friendly, and widely-distributed option for publications which, in the pre- or proto-internet era, would have naturally utilized the print medium, but also some other features as well: with blogging, there’s very little time commitment required. You don’t have to think about layout, format, how you’re going to duplicate and distribute your product–you just type whatever you want in the box, and hit “publish!”

As a result, there are jillions of bloggers globally disseminating their thoughts on any and everything who would never have bothered with print, some with and some without connections to literary and cultural communities in their region. It seems to me, at least, that now, with print no longer the default method for information dissemination, a person or group that chooses the print medium often does so consciously, choosing it over the benefits of the online medium for very specific reasons. Of course, the tactile experience of holding something as you read it is most often cited, but there are tons of other practical and aesthetic reasons. If you specifically want to reach a small, location-specific population of readers–bike riders in the Logan Square area, for example–it makes sense to print a very small run and make it available at the places where that population goes every day–bike shops; cafes, stores, and bars in Logan Square that always have a bunch of bikes out front.

In my conversation with Colin, I wondered if, specifically regarding zine-making versus blogging, the decision to publish in print might hinge on connections with visual art, in which the process of creating an object and the object’s orientation to its viewer and environment are essential elements in its total content. For this reason, I don’t think people will ever stop producing independent publications, but what’s represented in them has changed A LOT because of these new questions. If you don’t need a physical object to represent any part of your content, well, then, you’re probably going to be blogging and not book-making…. but then….

If the reasons to print are changing, how accurate of a picture are we getting of location-specific identities, culture, and communities from what’s still being printed? How do libraries, both independent and institutional, approach the systematic archiving of material that is ephemeral by nature? And most importantly, how are all people as consumers of information affected as the question of information dissemination becomes more and more metaphysical?

The “Death of Print” subject has been and continues to be discussed, examined, debated, deconstructed, reconstructed, and otherwise addressed in many different ways by many different people in many different places.  Our conversation here, like the topic itself, is already venturing into “meta” territory,  carried out as it is on the online blog of a community organization that archives geographically-specific independent and small press paper media. This series will highlight some of the ways people have responded to the question across different disciplines.

–MEREDITH

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