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1---
2title: Autocento of the breakfast table
3id: README
4subtitle: about this site
5genre: prose
6
7epigraph:
8 content: by Case Duckworth
9
10project:
11 title: About Autocento
12 class: meta
13 next:
14 - title: Index of common titles
15 link: common-titles
16 prev:
17 - title: Index of first lines
18 link: first-lines
19...
20
21Introduction
22------------
23
24_Autocento [of the breakfast table][]_ is a hypertextual exploration of the workings of revision across time.
25Somebody^[[citation needed][]]^ once said that every relationship we have is part of the same relationship; the same is true of authorship.
26As we write, as we continue writing across our lives, patterns thread themselves through our work: images, certain phrases, preoccupations.
27This project attempts to make those threads more apparent, using the technology of hypertext.
28
29I'm also an MFA candidate at [Northern Arizona University][NAU].
30This is my thesis.
31
32Genesis
33-------
34
35This project revolves around two sister concepts: the _hapax legomenon_ and the _cento_.
36
37_Hapax legomenon_ ([ἅπαξ][] λεγόμενον) is Greek for "something said only once."
38It's used in linguistics to describe words that appear only once in a corpus.
39If expanded to _n-grams_, it can be used to describe utterances that occur only once, and this is where it gets interesting.
40If this line of thinking is taken to its logical conclusion, we can say that all writing, all utterances, are _hapax legomena_, because they appear only once in the world as they are.
41In short, everything is individual; everything is differentiated; everything is an island.
42
43On the other hand, a _cento_, from the Latin, from the Greek κέντρόνη, meaning "patchwork garment," is a poem composed completely of fragments of other poems.
44It's a mash-up that makes up for its lack of originality in utterance with a novelty in arrangement.
45Usually, it refers to taking phrases, lines, or stanzas from other authors' works, but I don't see why it couldn't refer to _n-grams_ or individual words.
46If _this_ line of thinking is taken to its logical conclusion, we can say that no writing is truly original; that every utterance has, in some scrambled way at least, been uttered before.
47In other words, nothing is individual.
48We float on an ocean of language which we did nothing to create, and the best we can hope for is to find some combination that hasn't been thought of too many times before.
49As Solomon said, "[There is nothing new under the sun][nothing-new]."
50
51_Autocento of the breakfast table_ works within the tension caused by these two concepts.
52
53Process
54-------
55
56In compiling the works that make up this text, I've pulled from a few different projects:
57
58* [Elegies for alternate selves](and.html)
59* [The book of Hezekiah](prelude.html)
60* [Stark raving](table_contents.html)
61* [Buildings out of air](art.html)
62
63as well as added new articles, written quite recently.
64As I've compiled them into this project, I've linked them together based on common images or language, moving back and forth through time.
65This should give the reader a fair idea of what my head looks like on the inside.
66
67Technology
68----------
69
70Because this project lives online, I've used a fair amount of technology to get it there.
71First, I converted all the articles[^1] present into plain text files, which are viewable [here][text].
72Then, I used John McFarlane's venerable document preparation system [pandoc][], along with a short [script][compile.lua], to compile the text sources to HTML using [this template][].
73The compiled HTML is what you're reading now.[^2]
74
75To host the project, I'm using [Github][], an online code-collaboration tool with the version control system [git][] under the hood.
76This enables me (and you, dear Reader!) to explore the path of revision even more, from beginning to end, based on my commits to the repository.
77You can view the repository and its changes and files at [my Github profile][].[^3]
78
79Using this site
80---------------
81
82All of the articles on this site are linked together hypertextually (i.e., like a webpage).
83This means that all you need to do to explore the creative threads linking these articles together is to start clicking links.
84However, if you find you're looping around to a lot of the same articles, you can head back to the [index][] and click through the titles in order---that article contains the titles of all the other works in this project.
85
86Alternatively, you can click the lozenge (◊) at the bottom of each page.
87It'll take you to a random article in the project, thanks to [this javascript][].
88
89If you want to experience the earlier projects in something resembling the original orders, previous and next links are provided at the bottom of each page, next to the lozenge.
90Sometimes, there are more than one of each of these, or there are none, dependant on the structure of their original project.
91
92Things still to do
93------------------
94
95_Autocento of the breakfast table_ is a work in progress.
96The first draft is completed, but some revision and aesthetic work remains to be done for me to consider it fully "[published][]"
97(what does this word mean in 2015?).
98You can see the full list of to-dos by visiting the [issues page][issues] of the Github site.
99
100Contact me
101----------
102
103If you'd like to contact me about the state of this work or my writing in general, you can email me at <case@autocento.me>.
104
105<!-- links & footnotes -->
106[of the breakfast table]: http://www.ibiblio.org/eldritch/owh/abt.html
107[citation needed]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Citing_sources#Dealing_with_unsourced_material
108[NAU]: http://nau.edu/CAL/English/Degrees-Programs/Graduate/MFA/
109
110[ἅπαξ]: http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0057:entry=a%28/pac
111[nothing-new]: https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ecclesiastes+1%3A9&version=NIV
112
113[text]: src/common-titles.html
114
115[pandoc]: http://johnmacfarlane.net/pandoc/
116[compile.lua]: https://github.com/duckwork/autocento/blob/gh-pages/compile.lua
117[this template]: https://github.com/duckwork/autocento/blob/gh-pages/.template.html
118[Github]: https://github.com/
119[git]: http://www.git-scm.com/
120[my Github profile]: https://github.com/duckwork/autocento
121
122[index]: first-lines.html
123[this javascript]: https://github.com/duckwork/autocento/blob/gh-pages/js/lozenge.js
124
125[published]: published.html
126[issues]: https://github.com/duckwork/autocento/issues
127
128[^1]: I've decided to use the word _article_ instead of _poem_, because not all of the texts included are poems; and instead of _piece_, because _piece_ is vague and, to my mind, pretentious.
129 I'm aware that the true [etymology](http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?search=article) of _article_ does not reflect my use of it, namely "a little chunk of art", a la the (personal folk) derivation of _icicle_, _treicle_, etc.
130
131[^2]: The great thing about `pandoc` is that it can compile to, and convert between, about fifty formats or so.
132 This means that if, in the future, I choose to convert this project to a printable form (for example PDF, ODT, or even DOCX), I'll be able to with a fairly small amount of work.
133
134[^3]: For more information on the technological aspect of this project, see the [README.md](https://github.com/duckwork/autocento/blob/gh-pages/README.md) file at the root of the github repo.