- #“THE MYTH OF THE ANT QUEEN,” MANCHESTER CITY ARCHIVE#
- #“THE MYTH OF THE ANT QUEEN,” MANCHESTER CITY PLUS#
- #“THE MYTH OF THE ANT QUEEN,” MANCHESTER CITY SERIES#
"The Myth of the Ant Queen" was a fascinating art.
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100 biggest u s cities on a map jetpunk, SPSS in Practice: An Illustrated Guide.
#“THE MYTH OF THE ANT QUEEN,” MANCHESTER CITY SERIES#
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I doubt there is a queen, metaphorically or actually, within such communities, but perhaps some other driving force compelling them to act in such ways as to survive. Do they resemble the mold of Manchester with their explosive growth in a short amount of time, considering the recession? Are they just like any other neighborhood within the city - a moving of people together that share similar attributes? The shantytowns seem to lack the planning and government services of the surrounding area in which they reside, but government does sometimes intervene. Does each little detail add up to something? What could that possibly mean? It must mean something.Īnyways, I also wonder what role do shantytowns play as urban environments.
#“THE MYTH OF THE ANT QUEEN,” MANCHESTER CITY PLUS#
Every time I pass through the turnstile into the subway, does that send a little click into the mainframe? A series of 1s and 0s indicating one passenger at the Lombard - South station on the SEPTA orange line at 12:35pm on Wednesday, October 7, 2009? One loaf of Dutch Country whole wheat bread purchased for $3.59 plus tax at the South Square Supermarket at 7pm on Monday, Octowith a PNC Bank check card in my name. I can't help but think of IBM's commercials about "building smarter cities" as an attempt to corral all of these movements, trends, crimes, money spent, and personal narratives of the urban landscape into some sort of comprehensible computer data stream. I will now be much more conscious of my decisions and movements as part of a pattern. Such arc-hives destabilize the human-animal species hierarchy and disrupt the utopian impulse for unified fields of knowledge (i.e., the archive-as-utopia) in ways that are relevant to our contemporary informational landscape of digital archivization."The Myth of the Ant Queen" was a fascinating article and it left me with many more questions. Wells's “The Empire of the Ants” (1905) and The First Men in the Moon (1901) to probe the scenes of those other archives that are grounded in an incommensurable insect ontology. The title was a good one and described the purpose of the essay well, which I thought was to show how communities form and interact.
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I’d have to say that Johnson provided a different way to look at things than I’d ever looked at them. Inspired by Derrida's “retrospective science fiction,” this essay turns to H.G. This was a very interesting and strange essay. Vegan on a budget dollar tree haul, The Case of the Man Who Died Laughing. government didnt officially recognize Manchester as a city until. Engaging in an act of “retrospective science fiction” to ruminate upon the “scenes of those other archives,” Derrida reveals that what is at stake in archives and archivization is as much the collection, storage, and transmission of data as the construction of meaning and, by extension, material instantiation itself. Its early fall in Palo Alto, and Deborah Gordon and I are.
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#“THE MYTH OF THE ANT QUEEN,” MANCHESTER CITY ARCHIVE#
At one point in Archive Fever: A Freudian Impression (1995), Jacques Derrida waxes speculatively upon what “might have been” had late-twentieth century archives and archival technologies been available in the Victorian era.