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  1. Literary Ecology: From Resistance to Resilience

    Literary Ecology: From Resistance to Resilience

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 17.09.2020 - 12:36

  2. fakephone4a(n)droid

    fakephone4a(n)droid

    Rui Torres - 21.02.2021 - 19:04

  3. fakephone4a(n)droid

    fakephone4a(n)droid

    Rui Torres - 21.02.2021 - 19:12

  4. Tecnofobia en arácnido: Una genealogía robopoética.

    Tecnofobia en arácnido: Una genealogía robopoética.

    Tina Escaja - 09.03.2021 - 03:12

  5. From computer lib/dream machines

    From computer lib/dream machines

    Daniel Johannes Flaten Rosnes - 17.06.2021 - 21:47

  6. Twilight, A Symphony: The Great Lost Work of Michael Joyce

    Twilight, A Symphony remains one of the best novels in the career of Michael Joyce, a prolific author of electronic and print fiction. Unfortunately, the technological milieu of the work at the time of its publication in 1996 proved to be harsh, unfavourable, and ultimately (almost) deadly to the work. The global transition form Mac platform to Windows in the mid 1990s, the emergence of the Web as the platform for electronic literature publication, and the fading popularity of commercial, stand-alone authorial software such as Storyspace made Twilight, A Symphony stillborn on arrival. By the end of the decade only the specialised audience of critics and academics was able to read the work. Joyce himself call it his “great lost work.”

    Dene Grigar - 01.09.2021 - 18:07

  7. Hypertext Town: Marble Springs by Deena Larsen

    "The Hill," an introductory poem of the Spoon River Anthology by Edgar Lee Masters, is an epic style invocation with a series of repeated questions about the whereabouts of dead citizens of the town, each called by name, and a refrain “all are sleeping on the hill.” Because the fate of the deceased is just shortly mentioned, reading the poem today makes us want to activate the cross-referrals: Each name begs to be converted to a link and take us to a more detailed story of its bearer's life and death.

    Dene Grigar - 01.09.2021 - 18:19

  8. Affect, Emotion and Sensation in New Media Writing: The Work of John Cayley, MD Coverlry and Jason Nelson in Literature and Sensation, Cambridge Scholars Publishing

    Affect, Emotion and Sensation in New Media Writing: The Work of John Cayley, MD Coverlry and Jason Nelson in Literature and Sensation, Cambridge Scholars Publishing

    Hazel Smith - 03.09.2021 - 09:50

  9. Affect, Emotion and Sensation in New Media Writing: The Work of John Cayley, MD Coverlry and Jason Nelson in Literature and Sensation, Cambridge Scholars Publishing

    Affect, Emotion and Sensation in New Media Writing: The Work of John Cayley, MD Coverlry and Jason Nelson in Literature and Sensation, Cambridge Scholars Publishing

    Hazel Smith - 03.09.2021 - 09:50

  10. Hypertext Lake: Carolyn Guyer’s Quibbling or Lessons in Hypertext Reading

    If Michael Joyce’s afternoon, a story is the Yin of hypertext literature, then Carolyn Guyer’s Quibbling is the Yang: perhaps the ultimate hypertext of female sensitivity, poetics, and politics. Published in the autumn of 1992, Quibbling seems to be everything that afternoon, a story wasn’t. Instead of a single protagonist on a paranoid knowledge quest about those close to him and himself through a labyrinth of his fear and desire, the “digital rhapsody” [1] by this woman American author gives voice to a group of characters, four couples, without a distinct narrative centre towards which other voices would gravitate. As readers we are invited into their stories, their intellectual horizons, and into uncovering relations between these characters in the past and in the present. The whole work is broadly feminist, and as such it represents an innovative form of l'ecriture feminine [2] from the early 1990s with a fascinating, added value of experimentation with form in the electronic realm of hypertext.

    Dene Grigar - 07.09.2021 - 23:38

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