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The Dissected Manuscript

The Dissected Manuscript
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There are billions of stories that have been told in all of humanity and so there are a few that can be safely forgotten. Take a tour through a thrift store and you'll find hundreds of old hardcover books that are just begging to find a new life. Their intent, if they can have one, is to be read, but let's liberate them into something new. A phoenix from the ashes, if you will.

In memory of the surrealists who cut up pieces of text out of newspapers or books to create new narratives with horrendous plots I decided to take a tawdry novel and open it up to a vast realm of new possibilities. With the pages sliced up you can rearrange the tale of kids drinking, drugging and screwing. Go straight from the psychiatrist couch into a heroin binge and then into a fight with the disconnected parents. Only faster this time.

Or you could just accept this as an aesthetic exercise to see what you can create with a budget of $5 and a rainy afternoon to kill.
 
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Step 1Materials

Materials
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The main ingredient here is a great book. You can define greatness in your own way as that is a purely objective decision. Jackie Collins lives in my city and so I figured that she would be the perfect author to have her work destroyed. She's made millions and I really doubt that she'll be offended. It also happened to be the first book of the right size that I came across. And then I came up with some rationalization so that makes me happy enough.

The other qualities of greatness would relate to the thickness of the paper and the width of the pages. I've done a couple of other versions of this with a big thesaurus and the feel of the paper was better. I didn't feel bad about that as I don't believe in synonyms and any excuse to take those out of circulation is good in my opinion.

In addition to the book, get a pencil, an X-Acto with fresh blades, and a ruler.
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39 comments
Jun 30, 2007. 3:28 AMfreewheeler says:
the main book i intend to do this to is 'harry potter and the order of the phoenix'
Sep 13, 2009. 2:18 PMFoaly7 says:
If you do that, people will hunt you down. And I know a few of those people.
Dec 29, 2007. 5:17 PMtechnodude92 says:
if you cut it... the Potterheads will come... lol, some people at my school are BIG potter fans. If they even heard of your comment you would be toast(sliced toast).
Dec 31, 2007. 10:31 PMfreewheeler says:
all i can say is i'm glad i don't study at your school lol
Feb 21, 2008. 9:17 PMbmlbytes says:
He probably studies at Hogwarts
Apr 12, 2008. 5:22 PMflio191 says:
LOL XD
Nov 11, 2006. 6:56 PMCrash2108 says:
You should spray it with..............something that stiffens it.
Nov 11, 2006. 8:50 PMCrash2108 says:
I think that would be starch.
May 12, 2008. 7:26 PMTobita says:
or a Viagra-water solution:P
Feb 22, 2007. 6:44 PMhockeyteeth says:
Spray it with polyurethane! Just apply it in very light coats so you don't saturate the pages. Hairspray might work decently also.
Dec 11, 2006. 3:18 PMJunkyard John says:
if you found to evenly crinkle the whole book, then it might add to the art!
Mar 2, 2008. 12:29 AMRichardBronosky says:
I am tempted to do this with a Bible. Actually I'd use one of those abbreviated "New Testament with Psalms and Proverbs" versions, because the "potency" of the old testament doesn't lend itself to a mere 3-5 lines being "impactful". I like the idea of discovering something different every time you look at it. It kind of goes along with the "living and active" idea.

A lot of people would consider this kind of "dissection" to be disrespectful. But, I've done a lot worse to Bibles just carrying them around for years.
Feb 8, 2008. 2:21 PMniclet says:
Hi, very great project! It reminds me the 1961's Raymond Queneau "Cent Milliards de Poèmes" :
Some explanations
An image
Another

Cheers ;)
Jan 25, 2008. 7:18 AMmarc92 says:
I'd like to do this to my math textbook (and my English one.) I'm sure the teacher would understand: "The internet told me to do it so it must be OK."
Sep 29, 2007. 8:39 PMinquisitive says:
Excellent project-I want to try this on some of the multiple phone books pressed upon us-the paper is so thin-I bet the textural applications would be interesting! Thanks for the idea!
Dec 10, 2006. 12:54 AMwoodknot says:
I had to take a look at this because the little picture when it exploringly appears and disappears, looks like something made out of cloth. But a second look tells me that it's not cloth, IT'S ART! I challenge you to get even more creative. Specific books cut in specific ways. For example: The Christmas Carol sliced upward and draped down the stood up to look like a tree. I can see a whole art gallery on some side street, and on each white display cube--a book. On one, "A Comedy Legend-Bill Cosby" all cut up. On another, a biography of Truman Capote, nicely sliced and fluffed with those pretty paper scizzors that cut curliques. Someone would pay big bucks. Is that an architech's scale you are using to cut against? Shame on you.
Jan 31, 2007. 8:35 PMMarcos says:
OMG, you're using your scale as a straight edge to cut?!?!!? =:-o

Yep, strictly taboo! Because it's a precision measuring instrument. If you shave a bit of the edge with your X-acto or other razor knife, you've compromised the precision of the scale. This is especially true of engineer's scales, where you are measuring 1000ths of an inch or millimeter. If your drawing is off by a couple of thousandths, something ain't gonna fit after your expensive tooling is made from that drawing. Yeah, that's the old way, it's mostly CAD now.

You gotta respect the tools! Especially the older ones. You'd be hard pressed to find a good quality scale these days. I have a few of my machinist/pattern maker great-grandfather's tools, and they are heirloom quality treasures as far as I am concerned. Most I still use occasionally.
Jun 30, 2007. 3:38 AMfreewheeler says:
now i know why my parents rarely let me touch their scales.they're architechts.
Jun 30, 2007. 3:36 AMfreewheeler says:
woah,i didn't know that! my great grandfather had this BRILLIANT thing for drawing parralel lines,like two rulers attaced by these slanting links.
Jun 2, 2007. 10:35 PMtheStackasaurus says:
Ha ha. I'm glad I'm not the only one that was shocked and / or appalled at the cutting use of the architects' scale. On the other hand, this is a really neat project! I'm going to have to try it out and see what I come up with. I think it's better if you don't coat it with hardening stuff, so it can be interactive. You can play with it and flip the pages, like a more adult and artsy version of the kids' pop-up book.
Jun 30, 2007. 3:31 AMfreewheeler says:
if it wasn't such a lame author,my school librarian would have started crying if she saw that,even though i think it is cool.i learned a very important lesson,never drop a book in front of her.or any self respecting librarian.
May 13, 2007. 7:37 PMMace42 says:
looks like a fun project. + for the uniqueness.
Mar 15, 2007. 4:17 PMjessyratfink says:
Take that, Jackie Collins! I suggest John Grisham and Danielle Steel to anyone wanting to do this. There are so many of their books around you should be able to get them extra cheap! Hell, I'll send you some! We throw them out or donate them constantly at work. :P
Jan 22, 2007. 7:56 PMvioletseizure says:
woah, pictures.
Nov 11, 2006. 6:55 PMcry_wolf says:
Wow, the best thing to happen to the book since the book mark! Very nicely documented, and you didnt put the lingerie ads from amazon on the bottom of the page did you? Haha, no really there are lingerie ads, stretch alce 2 piece, 13.99 LOL
Nov 11, 2006. 10:55 PMtrebuchet03 says:
Those ads pay for the site ;) I see it too -- along with two book ads :P
Nov 13, 2006. 10:34 AMewilhelm says:
We've been experimenting with contextual ads from Amazon. I was hoping they would automatically identify tools and materials (from Amazon Industrial & Scientific) that could be useful and helpful. Obviously, they haven't quite figured out what this page is about yet.
Nov 14, 2006. 6:13 PMewilhelm says:
By discussing a certain ad, I think we may have doomed ourselves into seeing it! The Amazon contextual stuff is definitely not as good as Adsense. We'll see if it improves.
Nov 25, 2006. 4:10 PMzachninme says:
I keep seeing one for spandex, its on this page. Link
I would like if you could remove it, as it is never in context.
Nov 12, 2006. 7:13 AMTool Using Animal says:
Awesome, suggest "Bonfire of the Vanities" as your next object d'art.
Nov 12, 2006. 2:09 AMDoom_Goat says:
nice, would definately be a conversation starter
Nov 11, 2006. 4:52 PMgigman says:
Wow, nice! Very Very Cool!

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Author:fungus amungus(my site)
I like to make things both useful and odd. The odd projects are usually more fun. I'm also the Content Manager here at Instructables. Follow @edabot for more