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three
exquisite corpse: form and content
Folding chairs
Parts of speech

Nouns (from latin nomen, “name”)



Adjectives



A word that modifies a noun
Examples: “green”, “heavy”, “democratic”
Determiners (or “articles”)



A word for a person, place, thing, or action, or a class of person, place,
thing, or action
Examples: “examples”, “noun”, “George”, “Evanston”, “running”,
“terrorist”
Distinguish between a general versus a specific use of a noun
Examples: “a”, “the”, “some”, “which”
Verbs


Words that express actions, changes, or states of being
Examples: “go”, “went”, “is”, “love”, “has loved”
Exquisite corpse

“Game of folded paper that consists in having a sentence or a
drawing composed by several persons, each ignorant of the
proceeding collaboration”
1939 Abridged Dictionary of Surrealism
(as copied off the wall at the Art Institute of Chicago)

A technique used by the early surrealists for creating unexpected
combinations

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
Produces sentences that are grammatically correct
But semantically challeng(ing/ed)
One of the first uses of chance operations in composition
“the exquisite/corpse/will drink/the new/wine”
Exquisite corpse drawings
Source: http://anexquisitecorpse.net/explanation.shtml
a more recent example
Class sentences

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The blue time bends the blue chocolate
A pretty cardboard predicates the suicidal
sheep
The dirty muck becomes an elegant
nugget
The sonorous Norris University Center
laments a collapsed sun
Syntax


Fancy word for “grammar”
Describes how a language is composed of phrases

NounPhrase = determiner adjective noun



VerbPhrase = verb NounPhrase


eats a pickled monsoon
Sentence = NounPhrase VerbPhrase


the exquisite corpse
a pickled monsoon
the exquisite corpse eats a pickled monsoon
Can have different alternatives for a type of phrase



NounPhrase = noun | determiner noun | adjective noun
| determiner adjective noun
The “|” character here means “or else”
an exquisite corpse bought the president
Phrase structure of a sentence
Linguists notate phrase structure by bracketing:
 [sentence [NounPhrase the exquisite corpse] [VerbPhrase
[verbwill drink] [NounPhrase the new wine]]]
Or more readably …
 [sentence [NounPhrase the exquisite corpse]
[VerbPhrase [verbwill drink]
[NounPhrase the new wine]]]
Nested grammar

Some verbs are followed by entire sentences


VerbPhrase = verb | verb NounPhrase
| verb Sentence
[Sentence [NounPhrase We]
[VerbPhrase proclaim
[Sentence [NounPhrase the exquisite corpse]
[VerbPhrase [verb will drink]
[NounPhrase the new wine]]]]]

This is called “nesting” or “recursion”
Referring expressions in English

Phrases that refer to an object or objects

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
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

“Robin”
“James”
“The TAs of this class”
“the grad students of Ian”
“the people in 324”
“France”
“capitalism”
“The sum of 2 and 3”
“The mother of the TA of this class”
We’ll focus on two kinds


Names (“Robin”, “Rob”, “France”, “capitalism”)
Functional expressions (the X of Y)
A deeply nested referring expression

“The mother of the mother of the grandfather of the
father of the nation of the mother of the TA of this class”

[the mother of
[the mother of
[the grandfather of
[the father of
[the nation of
[the mother of
[the TA of
[this class]]]]]]]]
Please forgive the sexist expression “father of the nation”
Meaning follows form

“The mother of the mother of the grandfather of the father
of the nation of the mother of the TA of this class”

[the mother of
[the mother of
[the grandfather of
[the father of
[the nation of
[the mother of
[the TA of
[this class]]]]]]]]
Please forgive the sexist expression “father of the nation”
Meaning follows form

“The mother of the mother of the grandfather of the father
of the nation of the mother of the TA of this class”

[the mother of
[the mother of
[the grandfather of
[the father of
[the nation of
[the mother of
[the TA of
[this class]]]]]]]]
cs 395
Please forgive the sexist expression “father of the nation”
Meaning follows form

“The mother of the mother of the grandfather of the father
of the nation of the mother of the TA of this class”

[the mother of
[the mother of
[the grandfather of
[the father of
[the nation of
[the mother of
[the TA of
[this class]]]]]]]]
Robin
cs 395
Please forgive the sexist expression “father of the nation”
Meaning follows form

“The mother of the mother of the grandfather of the father
of the nation of the mother of the TA of this class”

[the mother of
[the mother of
[the grandfather of
[the father of
[the nation of
[the mother of
[the TA of
[this class]]]]]]]]
Robin’s mom
Robin
cs 395
Please forgive the sexist expression “father of the nation”
Meaning follows form

“The mother of the mother of the grandfather of the father
of the nation of the mother of the TA of this class”

[the mother of
[the mother of
[the grandfather of
[the father of
[the nation of
[the mother of
[the TA of
[this class]]]]]]]]
The United States
Robin’s mom
Robin
cs 395
Please forgive the sexist expression “father of the nation”
Meaning follows form

“The mother of the mother of the grandfather of the father
of the nation of the mother of the TA of this class”

[the mother of
[the mother of
[the grandfather of
[the father of
[the nation of
[the mother of
[the TA of
[this class]]]]]]]]
George Washington
The United States
Robin’s mom
Robin
cs 395
Please forgive the sexist expression “father of the nation”
Meaning follows form

“The mother of the mother of the grandfather of the father
of the nation of the mother of the TA of this class”

[the mother of
[the mother of
[the grandfather of
[the father of
[the nation of
[the mother of
[the TA of
[this class]]]]]]]]
George’s grandpa
George Washington
The United States
Robin’s mom
Robin
cs 395
Please forgive the sexist expression “father of the nation”
Meaning follows form

“The mother of the mother of the grandfather of the father
of the nation of the mother of the TA of this class”

[the mother of
[the mother of
[the grandfather of
[the father of
[the nation of
[the mother of
[the TA of
[this class]]]]]]]]
George’s great
grandma
George’s grandpa
George Washington
The United States
Robin’s mom
Robin
cs 395
Please forgive the sexist expression “father of the nation”
Meaning follows form

“The mother of the mother of the grandfather of the father
of the nation of the mother of the TA of this class”

[the mother of
George’s great
great grandma
George’s
great grandma
George’s grandpa
George Washington
The United States
Robin’s mom
[the mother of
[the grandfather of
[the father of
[the nation of
[the mother of
[the TA of
[this class]]]]]]]]
Robin
cs 395
Meaning follows form

“The mother of the mother of the grandfather of the father
of the nation of the mother of the TA of this class”
Robin’s
mom
CS-380
TA
Robin’s
gmom
mother
Washington Washington’s
W’s GD’s
W’s GD’s
mom
gmom
USA
grand- gdad
nation
father
mother
mother
father
What have we learned?

Media have
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
Structure/form/syntax
Meaning/content/semantics
The two are interdependent, but semi-autonomous

Media are generative
Their grammars can be filled in in an infinite number of ways

People are incredibly good at extracting meaning, even from
“meaningless” media
Chance operations can produce interesting juxtapositions

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Specify a structure
Fill in positions randomly
(There are other ways of doing chance operations too…)
Syntax of meta


We’ll be using a programming language called meta
It has a very simple syntax (we’ll modify this later):



Expression = word
| number
| “[“ Expressions … “]”
Phrases are explicitly grouped using brackets
Examples


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[box 10 10]
[point 100 100]
[line [point 100 100] [point 20 20]]
We’ll talk about semantics next …
Our example in Meta

“The mother of the mother of the grandfather of the father
of the nation of the mother of the TA of this class”

[mother-of
[mother-of
[grandfather-of
[father-of [nation-of [mother-of [TA-of cs-380]]]]]]]
Robin’s
mom
CAT-380
TA
Robin’s
gmom
mother
Washington Washington’s
W’s GD’s
W’s GD’s
mom
gmom
USA
grand- gdad
nation
father
mother
mother
father
I don’t expect you to understand this yet
Or alternatively…

“The mother of the mother of the grandfather of the father
of the nation of the mother of the TA of this class”

[with washington = [father-of
[nation-of
[mother-of [TA-of cs-380]]]]
[mother-of [mother-of [grandfather-of washington]]]
Robin’s
mom
CAT-380
TA
Robin’s
gmom
mother
Washington Washington’s
W’s GD’s
W’s GD’s
mom
gmom
USA
grand- gdad
nation
father
mother
mother
father
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