Electronic Literature: New Horizons for the Literary

Critical Writing
Publication Type: 
Language: 
Year: 
2010
ISBN: 
978-0-268-03084-1
978-0-268-03085-8
Pages: 
xiii, 223
License: 
All Rights reserved
Record Status: 
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Abstract (in English): 

Hayles’s book is designed to help electronic literature move into the classroom. Her systematic survey of the field addresses its major genres, the challenges it poses to traditional literary theory, and the complex and compelling issues at stake. She develops a theoretical framework for understanding how electronic literature both draws on the print tradition and requires new reading and interpretive strategies. Grounding her approach in the evolutionary dynamic between humans and technology, Hayles argues that neither the body nor the machine should be given absolute theoretical priority. Rather, she focuses on the interconnections between embodied writers and users and the intelligent machines that perform electronic texts.

Through close readings of important works, Hayles demonstrates that a new mode of narration is emerging that differs significantly from previous models. Key to her argument is the observation that almost all contemporary literature has its genesis as electronic files, so that print becomes a specific mode for electronic text rather than an entirely different medium. Hayles illustrates the implications of this condition with three contemporary novels that bear the mark of the digital.

(Source: Publisher's catalog description)

Pull Quotes: 

To see electronic literature only through the lens of print is, in a significant sense, not to see it at all.

The immediacy of code to the text's performance is fundamental to understanding electronic literature, especially to appreciating its specificity as a literary and technical production.

[T]he computational media intrinsic to electronic textuality have necessitated new kinds of critical practice, a shift from literacy to what Gregory L. Ulmer calls "electracy."

Electronic Literature extends the traditional functions of print literature in creating recursive feedback loops between explicit articulation, conscious thought, and embodied sensorimotor knowledge.

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Critical writing that references this:

Title Author Publisher Yearsort descending
Challenging Tongues: The “Irreducible Hybridity” of Language in Contemporary Bilingual Poetry Laura Pfeffer Synthesis: An Anglophone Journal of Comparative Literary Studies 2012
"Recensão sobre a Edição Brasileira do Livro de N. Katherine Hayles "Literatura Eletrônica: Novos Horizontes para o Literário" Daniela Côrtes Maduro Centro de Literatura Portuguesa, Revista de Estudos Literários 2012
A Short History of Electronic Literature and Communities in the Nordic Countries Hans Kristian Rustad Dichtung Digital 2012
E-Borges: Stuart Moulthrop’s Victory Garden Álvaro Seiça Op. Cit.: Revista de Estudos Anglo-Americanos/A Journal of Anglo-American Studies 2012
"A Machine Made of Words by a Machine Made of Numbers"- Authorial Presence in Niemi’s Stud Poetry David Boyles 2012
Towards Network Narrative: Electronic Literature, Communication Technologies, and Cultural Production David M. Meurer Dichtung Digital 2012
The Transducer Function: An Introduction to a Theoretical Typology in Electronic Literature and Digital Art Álvaro Seiça CITARJournal: Journal of Science and Technology of the Arts 2012
The Absence and Potential of Electronic Literature Sandy Baldwin 2013
The Idiocy of the Digital Literary (and what does it have to do with digital humanities)? Sandy Baldwin DHQ Digital Humanities Quarterly 2013
Litteratur i digitale omgivelser Øyvind Prytz Norsk kulturråd / Arts Council Norway 2013
“Iteration, you see”: Floating Text and Chaotic Reading/Viewing in slippingglimpse. Gwen Le Cor Electronic Book Review (ebr) 2013
Hypertext Revisited Jan Baetens Leonardo 2013
Digital Poesi. Æstetisk Analyse og det Mediales Rolle i Kunstværkers Kommunikation Mette-Marie Zacher Sørensen 2013
Galatea’s Riposte: The Reception and Receptacle of Interactive Fiction Lisa Swanstrom Electronic Book Review (ebr) 2013
Electronic Literature Organization Marjorie C. Luesebrink 2014
Autorschaft und digitale Literatur: Geschichte, Medienpraxis und Theoriebildung Heiko Zimmermann WVT - Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier 2015
Writing Coastlines: Locating Narrative Resonance in Transatlantic Communications Networks J. R. Carpenter 2015
Collapsing Generation and Reception: Holes as Electronic Literary Impermanence Graham Allen, James O’Sullivan Hyperrhiz: New Media Cultures 2016
In the Event of a Variable Text J. R. Carpenter Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies 2017
Conditions of Presence: Topological Complementarities in The Silent History David M. Meurer Paradoxa 2017
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Eric Dean Rasmussen