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  1. Reading the Code between the Words: The Role of Translation in Young-hae Chang Heavy Industries’s Nippon

    Reading the Code between the Words: The Role of Translation in Young-hae Chang Heavy Industries’s Nippon

    Meri Alexandra Raita - 02.10.2011 - 22:17

  2. What New Media Offers

    What New Media Offers

    Dene Grigar - 06.10.2011 - 07:02

  3. Aesthetics and Literature: A Problematic Relation?

    The paper argues that there is a proper for literature within aesthetics but that care must be taken in identifying just what the relation is. In characterising aestehtic pleasure associating with literature it is all too easy to fall into reductive accounts, for example, of literature of merely "fine writing". Bellelettrist or formalistic accounts of literature are rejected, as are to other kinds of reduction, to pure meaning properties and to a kind of narrative realism. The idea is developed that literature - both poetry and prose fiction - invites its own distinctive kind of aesthetic appreciation which far from being at odds with critical practice, in fact chimes well with it.  

    Kristina Gulvik Nilsen - 18.10.2011 - 14:05

  4. Stuck in a Loop? Dialogue in Hypertext Fiction

    "This paper will focus on the use of dialogue in two early hypertext fictions. Both Michael Joyce's afternoon, a story (first published 1987) and Yellowlees Douglas's I Have Said Nothing (1994) have achieved near-canonical status having been excerpted in print in the Norton anthology Postmodern American Fiction (Geyh). As is often the case with hypertext fictions, the writers, Jane Yellowlees Douglas and Michael Joyce, also happen to be two of the foremost theorists of the form, and the sense of mutual influence is unavoidable. The aims of this paper are twofold: to explore the functions of dialogue in these fictions and the extent to which the representations are innovative; and to examine whether we need to reassess our models for understanding the functions and forms of fictional dialogue as we have begun to apply them to the print novel." (Source: taken from the first paragraph of the paper itself)

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 01.11.2011 - 12:13

  5. Digital Media and Art: Always Already Complicit?

    A review of three recent books in digital media studies, by Lisa Gitelman, Marie-Laure Ryan, and Johanna Drucker, which have no cross-citations, and exemplify what Bolter describes as the " a rich diversity of forms of production and critical approaches". Bolter writes that "Each of these books contributes to a debate about new media, although no two of them participate centrally in the same debate", and goes on to explain how he sees very different debates taking place in the different areas of digital media studies.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 28.11.2011 - 11:35

  6. Cibertextualidades 2

    Cibertextualidades 2

    Rui Torres - 02.12.2011 - 15:13

  7. The Imaginary Solution

    "[A] particular modernism has finally fully arrived, about a decade behind schedule, but making up for lost time. Part of the task of this essay is to docu- ment the emergence of this return and to provide evidence of a ten- dency that plays out across media, indexing and exemplifying one of the defining conditions of its cultural moment. Because these works fall outside the genres and styles likely to be familiar even to many readers of avant-garde literature, this documentation will require a certain degree of descriptive cataloguing (although it is worth noting that the catalogue itself, not coincidentally, is a key component of the works I will itemize). With the series of examples that follow, I further hope to show that this particular trend in contemporary literature is uniquely hinged, not only recovering one of the dreams of its literary past but also looking forward to what may be the nightmare of our digital future.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 05.12.2011 - 13:38

  8. Comment lire la littérature numérique? L’expérience d’enseigner la Poésie Numérique dans les Études de Philologie Catalane

    Comment lire la littérature numérique? L’expérience d’enseigner la Poésie Numérique dans les Études de Philologie Catalane

    Sandra Hurtado - 06.12.2011 - 11:46

  9. Apprendre la littérature en ligne: transformer les techniques communicatives du discours savant

    Apprendre la littérature en ligne: transformer les techniques communicatives du discours savant

    Sandra Hurtado - 06.12.2011 - 11:49

  10. Broadening the e-learning technologies on literature: the effect of it over medieval Romance Literature

    Broadening the e-learning technologies on literature: the effect of it over medieval Romance Literature

    Sandra Hurtado - 06.12.2011 - 11:53

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