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  1. How We Read: Close, Hyper, Machine

    Article abstract required.

    Guest lecture at Duquesne University.

    Scott Rettberg - 21.03.2011 - 23:40

  2. Lire la littérature numérique à l’université : deux situations pédagogiques

    La littérature numérique n’a cessé se développer ces dernières décennies. La nature informatique et souvent hypermédiatique des œuvres incite le lecteur à mobiliser plusieurs approches et compétences, allant de l’analyse littéraire à la programmation, de l’esthétique au web-design, des études cinématographiques à la musicologie, des sciences de la communication à l’ingénierie des réseaux. Grâce à son caractère multidisciplinaire, une lecture analytique d’œuvres de littérature numérique peut être intégrée dans différents contextes pédagogiques. Après une brève introduction au vaste champ de la littérature numérique, je présenterai dans cet article deux situations d’enseignement où l’intégration de la littérature numérique peut contribuer non seulement à une hybridation salutaire des savoir-faire techniques, maisment critique des outils numériques et de leurs usages.

    Alexandra Saemmer - 03.07.2011 - 16:16

  3. ‘Trying to See the Garden’: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Hypertext Use in Composition Instruction.”

    Argues that technology necessitates that composition instructors gain the ability to shift perspectives and to look at the use of technology in composition instruction from as many disciplines as possible. Discusses some aspects of what it means to read and write in hypertext in two (normally mutually exclusive) perspectives: technology criticism and cognitive psychology.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 15.10.2011 - 20:58

  4. Reading, Writing, and Teaching Creative Hypertext: A Genre-Based Pedagogy

    The present essay contributes a genre-based pedagogy, until now only hinted at by hypertext theorists and not imported into the domain of hypertext by genre theorists. While I focus on creative hypertexts—autobiographies and popular genres like soap operas and road trip stories—a genre-based pedagogy can also be used to guide students through the production of informational, academic, community or club Web sites, personal home pages, and whatever blurred or evolving genres students are inspired by and see fit to explore.

    I advance a genre-based pedagogy for teaching the reading and writing of creative hypertext to enable teachers of hypertext to start from what they know and to provide them and their students with concrete terms and models. Such a pedagogy, especially if informed by recent scholarship on genre's flexible and rhetorical nature, requires students to make various choices not only about form but about compositional concerns: tone, diction, prose style, character development, plot, setting, visual design, and hypertext navigation strategies. (Source: from actual paper)

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 01.11.2011 - 12:22

  5. Games/gaming/simulation in a new media (literature) classroom

    Disccuses some practical issues involved in teaching new media in literature classroom, focusing on the necessity of teaching literatuer students to consider the language of gaming in the study of new media forms, on teaching collaborative media for the electronic media as a form of writing game, and on considering contemporary computer games in a cultural studies context.

    Scott Rettberg - 08.07.2013 - 21:18