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As I announced, I am interested currently in the theoretical and practical
relations between choreography and the "transart" project of ethnography.
Here's my first ethnographic post:
"Post-Modern Ethnography: From Document of the Occult to Occult Document"
(1986, Stephen Tyler)
1. Context
"Ethnography's" relation to the other fields of discourse and rhetoric, to
science and politics:
Ethno-graphy: the rhetoric of ethnography is neither scientific nor political.
It is ethical.
As the suffix -"graphy" implies, ethnography itself is contextualized by a
technology of
written communication.
(cf. "choreo-graphy": the writing of the dance)
I.
Neither part of the search for universal knowledge, nor an instrument for the
suppression/emancipation of peoples, nor just another mode of discourse on
par with
those of science and politics, ethnography is instead a specific discourse
to which all
other discourses are relativized and in which they find their meaning and
justification.
Ethnography's position is the consequence of its "imperfection." Neither self-
perfecting in the manner of scientific discourse, nor totalizing in the
manner of political discourse, it is defined neither by a reflexive
attention to its own rules nor by the performative instrumentality of those
rules.
Defined neither by form nor by relation to an external object, it produces
no idealization of form and performance, no fictionalized realities or
realities fictionalized. Its transcendence is not that of a meta-language - of a
language superior by means of its greater perfection of form - nor that of
a unity created by synthesis and sublation, nor of praxis and practical
application. Transcendent, then, neither by theory nor by practice, nor by
their synthesis, it describes no knowledge and produces no action.
It transcends instead by evoking what cannot be known discursively or performed
perfectly, though all know it as if discursively and perform it as if perfectly.
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(to be continued)
greetings
Johannes Birringer
Houston