anon_nofo said in #3727 2mo ago:
A close friend has championed the work of a certain Dennis Bouvard for a long while. He calls the broader field of related inquiry 'Center Studies', and certainly has gotten some mileage out of the ideas himself. I suspect many of you will be tangentially familiar with the project.
I think there is a lot of merit to the thought and the writing, but an important thing to note: it is notoriously difficult to parse up front due to jargon and overloaded vocabulary. It seems to avoid conceptual compression in a strange way, and so has a pretty steep learning curve. Somewhat similar to reading Victorian English, the initial difficulty does usually fade after a few minutes reading and/or repeated exposure.
The founding text of the field is "Anthropomorphics: An Originary Grammar of the Center" (Imperium Press), which is a very worthwhile read. Bouvard also posts regularly on Substack (https://dennisbouvard.substack.com). I will post a few of my favorite essays over the next week or so, but for this introductory thread I'd like to just hear from some members of their group. I hope Bouvard himself will be among them.
So, Center Studiers, what do you believe that others do not? What are your big claims and observations? Why should we take those claims and observations seriously?
I think there is a lot of merit to the thought and the writing, but an important thing to note: it is notoriously difficult to parse up front due to jargon and overloaded vocabulary. It seems to avoid conceptual compression in a strange way, and so has a pretty steep learning curve. Somewhat similar to reading Victorian English, the initial difficulty does usually fade after a few minutes reading and/or repeated exposure.
The founding text of the field is "Anthropomorphics: An Originary Grammar of the Center" (Imperium Press), which is a very worthwhile read. Bouvard also posts regularly on Substack (https://dennisbouvard.substack.com). I will post a few of my favorite essays over the next week or so, but for this introductory thread I'd like to just hear from some members of their group. I hope Bouvard himself will be among them.
So, Center Studiers, what do you believe that others do not? What are your big claims and observations? Why should we take those claims and observations seriously?
referenced by: >>3729 >>3731
A close friend has c