Showing posts with label A Near Asemic Switch-Logic: The Rose. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A Near Asemic Switch-Logic: The Rose. Show all posts

Thursday, August 28, 2025

A Near Asemic Switch-Logic: The Rose / EZE, 2025

A speculation on a development from Imagism to Asemic Writing.

The credo for Imagism is the primacy of the image.

Does this primacy illicit a kind of cliché-breaking in the image-narrative pattern, which then renders the conventional logic asemic or nearly so?

See also: TropeTropes and Archetypes and Clichés

The Rose (Lyrics)

For example, take this lyric in "The Rose": Some say love, it is a razor / That leaves your soul to bleed. This lyric breaks the tropecliché by substituting soul for heart, which, in turn, risks making itself asemic, i.e., without meaning or more to the point, dysfunctional in its normal form as communication

Indeed, the expected noun (image)-verb (action), your heart to bleed, makes more sense than the given noun-verb, your soul to bleed, a phrase which defies the usual sense of what a soul does.  

But notice too how the rupture of the image-narrative flow in "The Rose" is not altogether unlike the rupture forced by the verb-lacking juxtaposition of images in "In a Station of the Metro"?


Continuity as a Logical Imperative



True Detective, An Emphasis



Dysfunction, Non-Sense