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  1. RAW (Reading and Writing) New Media

    RAW New Media builds on the first decade of work in new media research within English studies, following (and also breaking from) the longer history of hypertext theory. The book defines new media only in as much as the individual chapters do so, setting the field as materially rich, ever-changing and remediating itself, and kairotic. What is “new” has no fixed boundaries. Because new media is constantly changing, it must be constantly historicized, theorized, and situated within cultural and social (as well as time-based and spatial) contexts.

    Scott Rettberg - 30.10.2011 - 20:26

  2. Ny litteraturdidaktik

    Ny litteraturdidaktik præsenterer en række nyskrevne artikler af danske litteraturforskere, som med udgangspunkt i deres egen forskning giver bud på en fornyelse af det didaktiske hvorforhvad og hvordan i litteraturarbejdet i skolen.   Ny litteraturdidaktik indeholder artikler af Poul Behrendt, Thomas Bredsdorff, Jan Fogt, Svend Erik Larsen, Anne-Marie Mai, Trine May, Gitte Mose, Lilian Munk Rösing, Svend Skriver og Bo Kampmann Walther.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 18.06.2012 - 11:19

  3. Hypertext and Cognition

    The recent evolution of western societies has been characterized by an increasing emphasis on information and communication. As the amount of available information increases, however, the user -- worker, student, citizen -- faces a new problem: selecting and accessing relevant information. More than ever it is crucial to find efficient ways for users to interact with information systems in a way that prevents them from being overwhelmed or simply missing their targets. As a result, hypertext systems have been developed as a means of facilitating the interactions between readers and text. In hypertext, information is organized as a network in which nodes are text chunks (e.g., lists of items, paragraphs, pages) and links are relationships between the nodes (e.g., semantic associations, expansions, definitions, examples -- virtually any kind of relation that can be imagined between two text passages). Unfortunately, the many ways in which these hypertext interfaces can be designed has caused a complexity that extends far beyond the processing abilities of regular users.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 27.06.2013 - 13:01