Created with Canva? The collage effect gives this rendering an inviting topology, Molly, in that, for me, it draws my eyes to the clusters and subsets of terms you have associated with each concentration. The terms are all the more apt for the way they are then threaded back into/through the text, and this is simultaneously textual memorial (i.e., a record of what was written) and inventional heuristic (i.e., priming jump-offs for extended and reiterative follow-ups). It reminds me faintly of speculations a few years ago about the prompting process where, for example, we could make a tag cloud from a set of readings for class, then use that cloud as a prompt, encouraging responses that rain-down (cloud-metaphorically!) the same weighted list of terms, or, in another scenario, that writes with the grain of the original texts but does not use any of the cloud rendered high frequency terms.
Created with Canva? The collage effect gives this rendering an inviting topology, Molly, in that, for me, it draws my eyes to the clusters and subsets of terms you have associated with each concentration. The terms are all the more apt for the way they are then threaded back into/through the text, and this is simultaneously textual memorial (i.e., a record of what was written) and inventional heuristic (i.e., priming jump-offs for extended and reiterative follow-ups). It reminds me faintly of speculations a few years ago about the prompting process where, for example, we could make a tag cloud from a set of readings for class, then use that cloud as a prompt, encouraging responses that rain-down (cloud-metaphorically!) the same weighted list of terms, or, in another scenario, that writes with the grain of the original texts but does not use any of the cloud rendered high frequency terms.