Poetic Incommunicability: An 'Efficient' Creative Force
Paper in proceeding, 2015

Amidst the hysteria for constant connectivity, transparency and ‘efficient’ creativity which belies the current crisis of creativity, this paper asserts the value of poetic incommunicability—to creativity and to society. The role of the poet-artist-designer is vital in constructing structures of multivocality which activate the dynamic relations between communicability and incommunicability. The paradoxically ‘efficient’ mechanisms of these structures can be understood through theories of poetry depicted by Viktor Shklovsky and André Breton. The ‘black box’, a figure of incommunicability borrowed from science, represents the possibility of temporary disconnection, a critical precondition of creativity. Conceptualizing and valuing such spaces while designing the interruptibility of their reciprocal relations with communicability—the architecture of their porosity—becomes the primary task of ‘dialogical design’. These themes are explored, conveyed, delayed and complicated through the device of the metalogue, which collages and connects, often in a more physical narrative sense.

creativity

multivocality

opacity

dialogical design

black boxes

incommunicability

Author

Jonathan Geib

Chalmers, Architecture

Transvaluation: Making the World Matter, International Symposium

Subject Categories

Design

Literary Composition

HUMANITIES

Architecture

Sociology

Cultural Studies

Communication Studies

Other Social Sciences not elsewhere specified

More information

Created

10/7/2017