
collaborate |kəˈlabəˌrāt| verb
ORIGIN - latin from the verb collaborare: col ‘together’ + laborare ‘to work’
to work jointly on an activity, especially to produce or create something,
also, to cooperate traitorously with an enemy
By citing collaboration, calling collaboration, casting collaboration beyond singular sight invites a way of reading what takes place that pushes any event or any seemingly singular thing off of itself and into a mobile space, a transient space, a creative space - a future space as it is always more than one - it is always between.
(Rebecca Schnieder, Encounters, 2007)
ORIGIN - latin from the verb collaborare: col ‘together’ + laborare ‘to work’
to work jointly on an activity, especially to produce or create something,
also, to cooperate traitorously with an enemy
By citing collaboration, calling collaboration, casting collaboration beyond singular sight invites a way of reading what takes place that pushes any event or any seemingly singular thing off of itself and into a mobile space, a transient space, a creative space - a future space as it is always more than one - it is always between.
(Rebecca Schnieder, Encounters, 2007)