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p. 105-120
Weak anticipation is involved (possibly in more than a way) in texts obeying genre-bound poetic conventions, in the generation of such texts, in their receptions, and possibly in events related in such texts, the events having been conceived not necessarily in a vein of realistic verisimilarity. This paper starts with a situation arising in the reception triggered by two ads contiguously rotating on a signboard ; then turns to retracing a schema of how to conceptualize the generation of a text by Rosenzweig, which achieves mock-explanation by ascribing foreknowledge to a character. That literary text combines both mock-etymology and narrative mock-explanation (a humourous aetiological tale), in the form of a learned treatise full of intertextual references to a genre-specific literary canon. An AI formal analysis is sketched for part of its opening page.
Ephraim Nissan, « The COLUMBUS Model, Part I », CASYS, 12 | 2002, 105-120.
Ephraim Nissan, « The COLUMBUS Model, Part I », CASYS [Online], 12 | 2002, Online since 16 July 2024, connection on 27 December 2024. URL : http://popups.uliege.be/3041-539x/index.php?id=1695
School of Computing and Mathematical Sciences, The University of Greenwich, Queen Mary Court, Old Royal Naval College, 30 Park Row, Greenwich, London SE10 9LS, England, U.K.