hypertext fiction

Hypertext fiction was the first form of electronic literature to garner sustained critical interest during the late 1980s and early 1990s. A small but dedicated group of writers began to work seriously in the genre at the same time as the personal computer and then the Internet were becoming widely adopted, writing stories designed as interlinked fragments of text, with multiple possible reading sequences to be navigated through the reader’s selection of links between them. At the same time, postmodernism was reaching the peak of its literary and theoretical interest. Hypertext fiction represented a bridge between the literary experimentation of the late twentieth century and the cultural shifts accompanying the move to networked computing. Although other practices of digital writing preceded literary hypertext, without the small critical industry that developed around hypertext fiction during this period, electronic literature would likely not have been established as a field of academic research and practice in the way that it is today. While we cannot understate the importance of hypertext for the development and growth of the electronic literature community, there is less recent activity in this genre, though in some ways the core ideas and basic techniques of hypertext have migrated into genres such as installations, interactive 3D works in CAVEs, and apps for mobile devices.

(Source: Scott Rettberg, Electronic Literature, Polity, 2019)

Displaying 21 - 40 of 122
Titlesort ascending Author
The melancholic hypertext : the fate of the writer in the tangential narrative Andreas Kitzmann
The Genealogy of a Creative Community: Why is Afternoon the "Grandaddy" of Hypertext Fiction? Jill Walker Rettberg
The End of Books--Or Books Without End: Reading Interactive Narratives J. Yellowlees Douglas
The Ed Report William Gillespie, Nick Montfort, Dylan Meissner
The Durability of Love: Background and History of Tim McLaughlin’s Notes Toward Absolute Zero Dene Grigar
The Dionaea House Eric Heisserer
Tending the Garden Plot: Victory Garden and Operation Enduring.... David Ciccoricco
Tekstspill i hypertekst. Koherensopplevelse og sjangergjenkjennelse i lesing av multimodale hyperfiksjoner Hans Kristian Rustad
Ted the Caver Anonymous
Stuck in a Loop? Dialogue in Hypertext Fiction Bronwen Thomas
Stitching Together Narrative, Sexuality, Self: Shelley Jackson's Patchwork Girl George P. Landow
Stitch Bitch: the Patchwork Girl Shelley Jackson
Start at the End: a Hypertext Fiction Philipp Hofmann
Speak, "Memory": Simulation and Satire in Reagan Library Shuen-shing Lee
Semantisation, Exploration, Self-reflection and Absorption: Our Modes of Reading Hypertext Fiction Hans Kristian Rustad
Samplers: Nine Vicious Little Hypertexts Deena Larsen
Salon March 9, 2021: African Electronic Literature Yohanna Joseph Waliya
Reproductive Technologies, Fetal Icons, and Genetic Freaks: Shelley Jackson’s Patchwork Girl and the Limits and Possibilities of Donna Haraway’s Cyborg Heather Latimer
Reagan Library Stuart Moulthrop
Reach, a Fiction Michael Joyce
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