January 03, 2004

Dr. Frank and the Marginalized Subjectivity of Demo(li)tion

via Emily, I discovered the PoMo English Title Generator.

And of course I had to try it (and not only since every time I hot-link this, I get a few more orders):

Dr. Frank, Eight Little Songs, and The Proletariat: Sectioning Racist Perversion

Feminist Tongues and the Diaspora of Polyvocal Community in Dr. Frank's Eight Little Songs

Otherness and Fragments in Eight Little Songs: Dr. Frank Penetrating Unitary Hybridity

Dr. Frank, Eight Little Songs, and The Bourgeois: Encoding Anal Artifacts

Consuming Savagery: Encoded Attraction in Dr. Frank's Eight Little Songs

The Outrage of Penetration and the Deaf in Dr. Frank's Eight Little Songs

The Exploited Exhuming The Queer: Dr. Frank, Eight Little Songs and Influence

Fetishing, Dismembering, Speaking: Spirit in Dr. Frank and the Marginalized Subjectivity of Demo(li)tion in Eight Little Songs


Am I crazy, or does this one almost kind of make sense?
Heteronormative Concealment and the Diaspora of Oral Fuzziness in The Mr. T Experience's Yesterday Rules

Well, maybe not. But I'm calling my next album The Diaspora of Oral Fuzziness unless anything better pops up.


Posted by Dr. Frank at January 3, 2004 06:30 PM | TrackBack
Comments

I don't know, Frank, I think that "Otherness and Fragments", "The Outrage of Penetration", or "Consuming Savagery" make better album titles. The last doesn't seem quite your style, though.

Posted by: Angie Schultz at January 3, 2004 07:16 PM

I still think "Exposing The Sausage" is a great album title waiting to happen for someone, somewhere...

Posted by: Don at January 4, 2004 04:49 AM

Well, Angie, I'm not married to it.

Posted by: Dr. Frank at January 4, 2004 04:07 PM

still laughing! i, too, decided i would get crafty trying to name our next album. i typed in 'resident jason' as the author and got: refuting advocacy and the dis-ease of edges

Posted by: resident jason at January 5, 2004 03:35 PM

"Oral Fuzziness . . . Consuming Savagery . . . Well, Angie, I'm not married to it."

That's what she said! Or...That's the opposite of what she said? That's what she would have said had you said what it said about you? No, I guess not. Sometimes that just joke doesn't work out how it seems it initially might.

Posted by: Dave Bug at January 5, 2004 09:05 PM