Curation Final
Curation Final
Curation Final
Haebin Buchanan
Michelle Liu
ENGL 302 A
14 November 2016
Curation
Without even looking for the sake of answering the prompt, four artifacts stood out to
me as soon as they were assigned from Fakes. These artifacts were I CAN SPEAKTM,
Permission Slip, Chaucer Tweets the South by Southwest Festival and My Beard,
Reviewed. The connection I saw throughout these different fake artifacts was the idea of
“correct” and “incorrect” language. Correct, meaning the proper, scholarly grammar and
syntax that is accepted my society versus incorrect, meaning colloquial, poor grammar and
syntax that is frowned upon my most of society (teachers, professors and employers). For
the sake of clarification, I will share my initial readings of each artifact and draw in one at
to her wanting to return an item. There is a definite informal tone in the contents of the
letter because he drops trances of himself in the letter rather than keeping things strictly
professional and to the point regarding her concern. Readers can see the things that are
going on his life, looking past his work life from the things that he talks about. Also, we
can analyze the things that he says and how and see what type of person he is. From the
way he begs for sympathy by giving his personal story, I see that he can be a bit
manipulative. However, his want for her to not return the item does not seem to stem from
In Permission Slip, the narrator of this artifact is not educated, and it is very evident in
the way she speaks. She speaks about few different things throughout her narrative, yet it is
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difficult to follow what is going on because of the type of language she uses. The thoughts
on I CAN SPEAKTM and Permission Slip seem very incoherent at this point because they
were read as two different stories, but when brought together, I saw there was a different
story. While reading these together, the things that I paid attention to in each artifact were
When brought into conversation together, I saw that the ‘correct’ way of using
language does not always result in the most accurate description of feeling. For example,
the item that the women in I CAN SPEAK wanted to return was a device that had this
algorithm that allowed the device to read what the baby felt and (questionably) spoke for
the baby is perfect speech so that the parents could understand. However, even the worker
writing the letter said that, that is not what the baby really is feeling or thinking so we see
this margin of error in portraying actual needs. This device also eliminates the chance of
the baby learning to speak by learning from mistakes. When looking at Permission Slip
alongside I CAN SPEAK, we know that the narrator is not of high education and she speaks
as she pleases. The difference between her and the people in I CAN SPEAK is that I can get
a feel for the type of personality she has. I can hear her voice as I read, and she seems like
such a real person with 3D features. And I believe that this is because, although her use of
language is terrible (by societal standards), she uses language that accurately portrays her
feelings. By her choice of words and how she chooses to say them, I find myself feeling
beard. When reading this alone, I wondered if it was making fun of how just about
anything can be reviewed, even the weirdest things, but when I read it closely in respects to
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I CAN SPEAKTM and Permission Slip, the reviews in the artifact are all talking about how
much that they like the beard, but how do we really know that they love the beard?
Everything is just written words and they use similar language saying that they love it, but
how do other people really know the exact feeling that someone else feels from really
loving something? For example, to explain you really love something, someone might say,
“I can’t even contain myself when I think about it because (*insert scream*) I can’t even!,”
while pounding on something because they can’t properly portray the actual feeling of love
with proper words. Tying this into I CAN SPEAK, I talked about how I thought the
employee who sent the letter was manipulative, but this is not a definite statement. From
what I’ve read and connecting him to the people I really know, I can draw this assumption,
but the truth is that I really do not know because language is ambiguous. While he leaves
room for me to assume, he might just be a person who likes to share person details, but
really means nothing by saying things like that. But when you used expressive, but
‘wrong’ language, then it seems to be more accurate in portraying feelings and emotions of
someone. In turn, this reflects what type of person they can be.
This is not to say the incorrect language is always acceptable and that is shown in
Chaucer Tweets the South by Southwest Festival. Most people are familiar with the social
media site, Twitter, and the short messages that are shared are called tweets. The tweets
that are being shared in this artifact definitely seem weird because the language that is
being used almost seems old and complex, but you soon realize that they are filled with
spelling errors. It also talks about hipsters a lot, which made me wonder if it is ridiculing
hipsters. But when brought into play with the conversation that I’ve been sharing, this
particular artifact turns my argument in a different direction. It seems that the people who
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are tweeting are spelling all sorts of words incorrectly while sounding like they are
educated in old English. This could be a ridicule of the younger generations that live on
social media and reply on text and chat to converse with peers. They believe that they are
educated and try to portray this, but in truth, people are becoming less educated due to
one’s feelings and emotions, the incorrect use of language stemming from technology is
The wonder that explored through these artifacts was the idea of improper language
being more expressive for true feelings rather than proper language, which is more
ambiguous than we lead it to be. As a society, we tell people to “use your words” to
explain what they feel or want, all the while analyzing a single sentence from a book and
improper language, why do we have proper language and why is it that, that is the way in
which we speak?