GENESIS: A Constructionist Theory of Literature III. You are more than a fossil – so stay far away from all absinthe. To analyse discourse rationally something better than formaldehyde is needed. The dead are all around us – libraries are noted as intellectual cemeteries. The key is to keep moving & find a quiet point inside When you find that, open your senses & don't let theories straight-jacket what is perceived! Reading is a sort of magic & it's worth remembering – errors are seldom as they first appear: often they are doors to discoveries that open greater spheres. Shu: (coughing) Isn't there's too much crap here? Ella: Agreed. The poem should be fermented. Juanita: (sipping some wine) Or festooned as fey & fickle flim-flam folly! Jack: Actually, I think the poet is saying something significant. You just have to work through the metaphors. ===================================================================================== from Lit-A-Rupture: A Post Literary Construction by T Newfields SUMMARY: Some thoughts about literature, text interpretation, and fossils. KEYWORDS: reading processes, text interpretation, reading imagery, meaning making, interpretative literature by T Newfields [Nitta Hirou / Huáng Yuèwǔ] (b. 1955) Begun: 1995 in Shizuoka, Japan ⨳ Finished: 2020 in Yokohama, Japan Creative Commons License: Attribution. {{CC-BY-4.0}} Granted < LAST https://www.tnewfields.info/LitaRupture/gen2.htm TOC https://www.tnewfields.info/LitaRupture/index.html NEXT > https://www.tnewfields.info/LitaRupture/critic.htm TRANSLATIONS Chinese https://www.tnewfields.info/zh/chuangshi3.htm French https://www.tnewfields.info/fr/gene3.htm German https://www.tnewfields.info/de/genes3.htm Japanese https://www.tnewfields.info/jp/souseiki.htm Spanish https://www.tnewfields.info/es/genesi3.htm