It’s not my fault what you said can be misconstrued as sexual innuendo
Today’s FYS class was really interesting. Oh by the way, Dr. Campbell, thanks for using my uber long blog for the Wordle demonstration. Wordle is awesome!!! And I might as well clear this up–the reason my blog title is what it is is because when someone was reading today in class, and he made a little slip of the tongue, I just thought, “Freudian slip!!” Lol, sorry. What can I say? My old English teacher was big on Freud. But, my whole Freudian slip thing just goes back to word association and the different ways people interpret and associate different things. Which goes back to the Wordle demonstration today. By seeing the different words in that shape (which when it first came out, I thought it looked like a fish. Haha) and by seeing which words were bigger and bolder and stood out more, we could more or less get an idea of what my blog was about. However, seeing only the words, I think, is still very abstract–as in, others will probably make different assumptions about what the blog is about that could be totally different from what it really is about, simply because different people make different associations with words. But, it’s also beneficial to hear these different associations because, like we mentioned in class, you’ll expand your perspective on things and be able to make more connections when you see certain words.
Something else I found really interesting was that chair explanation Dr. Campbell talked about. When we see a chair, we say it’s a chair without thinking. And when we see the word chair, it’s not a chair, it’s a word. And if there was no word for chair and you wanted to sit down, well, you’re screwed. The point was that language makes communication so much more efficient and effective, and being fluent in a language makes it that much better, whether you’re communicating personally or through something like instant messaging or Twitter. What it made me think of, though, was how just because you can say something eloquently, that doesn’t automatically mean that it will be perceived by others the way you perceived it. Like Shakespeare. I mean, I absolutely love him–and literature/poetry in general because it’s open to many different interpretations. And, certain words have certain connotations–which can be different to different people–which is one of the reasons why a piece of work can be interpreted in various ways. Diction is one of my favourite rhetorical devices
Diction and satire
So, there’s my two cents for today, and in addition to two cents, I’ve provided a lovely link to a song.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kwu2HvXRAGk
Ari xx