Electronic Literature, Chapter 6: Network Writing

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This research collection includes references from the sixth chapter of Electronic Literature by Scott Rettberg (Polity, 2018), on Network Writing. Network writing is electronic literature created for and published on the Internet. It may require readers to visit multiple sites to experience the narrative, it may interrogate the nature and materiality of the network itself, it may use the Internet’s potential for collaboration, or use the network as a site for performance. For electronic literature, networks are both platform and material. As technology has led to rapid societal change, one of the most logical extensions of the project of electronic literature is to serve as a locus of reflexive critique of the position of the human within the technological apparatus.

This chapter of Electronic Literature considers various practices of network writing that share an interest in the material properties of the global network and the writing environments it affords. While this constellation of practices is admittedly less squarely defined than some of the other genres addressed in the book, as it includes several subgenres with their own specific approaches to the network, there are clearly important strands of electronic literature that primarily engage with the architecture, code, and social structures of the network itself.

People:

Name Residency
Johanna Drucker
CA
United States
California US
William Gillespie
IL
United States
Illinois US
Scott Rettberg
Bergen
Norway
NO
Dirk Stratton
WA
United States
Washington US
Frank Marquardt
CA
United States
California US
Rob Wittig
Duluth , MN
United States
Minnesota US
Philip Wohlstetter
Seattle , WA
United States
Washington US
Judd Morrissey
Chicago
United States
US
Mark Jeffery
Chicago
United States
US
N. Katherine Hayles
Durham , NC
United States
North Carolina US
Tom Phillips
Christy Dena
Parkville
Australia
AU
Jill Walker Rettberg
Bergen
Norway
NO
Talan Memmott
United States
US
Caleb Crain
United States
US
Rob Wittig
Duluth , MN
United States
Minnesota US
Mark C. Marino
Los Angeles , CA
United States
California US
Ray Johnson
Alan Sondheim
United States
US
Mez Breeze
Australia
AU
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Critical Writing:

Title Author Yearsort descending
Invisible Rendezvous: Connection and Collaboration in the New Landscape of Electronic Writing Rob Wittig 1994
Introduction: Codework Alan Sondheim 2001
Writing Machines N. Katherine Hayles 2002
Interferences: [Net.Writing] and the Practice of Codework Rita Raley 2002
The Code is not the Text (unless it is the Text) John Cayley 2002
Über Literatur und Digitalcode / Digital Code and Literary Text Florian Cramer 2004
Distributed Narrative: Telling Stories Across Networks Jill Walker Rettberg 2005
Weblog Jill Walker Rettberg 2005
Surveillance Society: The Mass-Observation Movement and the Meaning of Everyday Life Caleb Crain 2006
Rhizome Net Art Anthology: Mezangelle 2006
Electronic Literature Collection, Volume One 2006
Jacket Flarf feature: Introduction Gary Sullivan 2006
Transmedia Practice: Theorising the Practice of Expressing a Fictional World across Distinct Media and Environments Christy Dena 2009
Flarf is Dionysus. Conceptual Writing is Apollo Kenneth Goldsmith 2009
All Together Now: Hypertext, Collective Narrative, and Online Collective Knowledge Communities Scott Rettberg 2011
Netprov - Networked Improv Literature Mark C. Marino 2011
Networked Improv Narrative (Netprov) and the Story of Grace Wit & Charm: Rob Wittig's Thesis Defense Rob Wittig 2011
Digital Rhetoric and Poetics: Signifying Strategies in Electronic Literature Talan Memmott 2011
Writing Under: Selections From the Internet Text Alan Sondheim 2012
Lift This End: Electronic Literature in a Blue Light Stuart Moulthrop 2013
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Scott Rettberg