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Re: non musical looping



> >A few films I can think of in that connection are "Rashomon," > >"Run
Lola Run," "Memento," and "Groundhog Day."

A few more examples from literature:

"Frame-Tale" by John Barth (in his collection of stories "Lost in the
Funhouse").  The text "Once upon a time" is printed along the edge of the
page, and along the same edge of the back of the page is printed "there was
a story that began".  Barth instructs the reader to cut off the strip of
paper containing the text, twist it once and then tape it together into a
Möbius strip.  The text, which then literally and figuratively loops back 
on
itself, reads:  "Once upon a time there was a story that began once upon a
time there was a story that began . . ." ad infinitum.

A second example is Eugene Ionesco's 'Anti-Play' "The Bald Soprano" (La
Cantatrice Chauve in the original French).  The play begins with a couple
sitting chatting quietly in their living room, after which some visitors
stop by.  The action becomes more and more absurd and contentious until 
they
all wind up spouting total inanities whilst screaming at the top of their
lungs.  The lights go out, the curtain closes then reopens with the 
original
couple sitting in their living room, quietly repeating their original
conversation.

A third example is a short story by Julio Cortázar, "Continuity of Parks"
(Continuidad de los Parques in the original Spanish).  It's only a couple 
of
paragraphs -- read it for yourself at
http://www.geocities.com/muna_qudah/cortazar.html

This also reminds me of the visual "looping" (I'm sure there's some other
more specific term for it) in painting where a figure repeats itself
infinitely.  For example:  the old Quaker Oats cardboard cylinders used to
show a bespectacled white-wigged gentleman holding a box of Quaker Qats on
which he was pictured holding a box of Quaker Oats etc.