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Twilight, A Symphony
Michael Joyce's Twilight, A Symphony is a courageous and innovative exploration of home, family, and the nostalgia that can't ever quite replace them. At the heart of Twilight is erstwhile reporter Hugh Colin Enright. Estranged from his wife, on the run, and sequestered with his infant son on the shores of Pleasant Lake, Hugh is befriended by an eccentric Polish politcal refugee and his wife, Magda. Years later, Hugh and the ailing Magda are together again, on a macabre odyssey in search of the Twilight doctor, the only person who might be willing to help Magda end her life. In its fearless exploration of death and desire, Twilight, A Symphonytakes an unflinching yet deeply compassionate look at the fears and longings that haunt us all.Michael Joyce's Twilight, A Symphony is a courageous and innovative exploration of home, family, and the nostalgia that can't ever quite replace them. At the heart of Twilight is erstwhile reporter Hugh Colin Enright.
Jill Walker Rettberg - 13.01.2011 - 00:02
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Brian McHale
Brian McHale
Scott Rettberg - 13.01.2011 - 14:39
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David Herman
David Herman
Scott Rettberg - 13.01.2011 - 14:40
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Teaching Narrative Theory
Teaching Narrative Theory
Scott Rettberg - 13.01.2011 - 14:47
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Modern Language Association (MLA)
Founded in 1883, the Modern Language Association of America provides opportunities for its members to share their scholarly findings and teaching experiences with colleagues and to discuss trends in the academy. MLA members host an annual convention and other meetings, work with related organizations, and sustain one of the finest publishing programs in the humanities. For over a hundred years, members have worked to strengthen the study and teaching of language and literature.
Scott Rettberg - 13.01.2011 - 14:56
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Digital Media
The chapter takes readers through a semester of teaching narrative-based electronic literature works, including interactive fiction, storyspace hypertexts, web hypertexts, email fiction and interactive web-based narratives.
Scott Rettberg - 13.01.2011 - 15:24
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Matteo D’Ambrosio
Matteo D’Ambrosio is Professor of History of Literary Criticism at the University of Naples Federico II. Semiotician and avant-garde historian, he has studied at Harvard University (as Fulbright Fellow); Yale University; Getty Research Institute (as Visiting Scholar), and he has been Visiting Professor of Literary Semiotics at the PUC of São Paulo. As a member of the Ministerial committee for the centenary of Futurism, between 2009 and 2011 he has participated in various symposia and events (Helsinki, Stuttgart, Tirana, Nice, Chambéry, Grenoble, Milan, Rome, Capri, Ferrara, Naples, Florence…). After six volumes on the relationships between the Futurist movement and Neapolitan culture (1990-1996), he has published Futurismo e altre avanguardie (1999); Le “Commemorazioni in Avanti” di F. T. Marinetti. Futurismo e critica letteraria (1999); Roman Jakobson e il Futurismo italiano (2009).
Patricia Tomaszek - 13.01.2011 - 15:43
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Peter Lang
Peter Lang - International Academic Publishers publish a diverse range of academic books, from monographs to student textbooks. Their main offices are located in Bern, Brussels, Frankfurt, New York and Oxford.
Scott Rettberg - 13.01.2011 - 15:44
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Toward a Semiotic Critique of Computer Poetry
Toward a Semiotic Critique of Computer Poetry
Patricia Tomaszek - 13.01.2011 - 15:45
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Editorial Process and the Idea of Genre in Electronic Literature in the Electronic Literature Collection, Volume 1
The article focuses on two subjects: the process of editing the Electronic Literature Collection, Volume 1 (2006), and the idea of genre in electronic literature. The author was one of four editors of the first volume of the Collection, along with N. Katherine Hayles, Nick Montfort, and Stephanie Strickland. The Collection, which will be published on a regular basis, is intended to distribute contemporary electronic literature to a wider audience, and to provide a contextual and bibliographic apparatus to make electronic literature more accessible to audiences and educators. In the past decades, the forms of literary artifacts described as electronic literature have diversified to the extent that it is difficult to continue describe them using traditional terms of literary genre. The essay addresses some of the problems involved in classifying digital artifacts by genre, and suggests some avenues of addressing these epistemological challenges. The essay calls for a contextual understanding of works of electronic literature, based both on their nature as procedural artifacts and on their position within a historical continuum of avant-garde practices.
Scott Rettberg - 13.01.2011 - 15:49