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  1. Cybertekst: Metodologia i interpretacja

    Fragments from a dissertation written under the guidance of of prof. P M. Markowski and defended at the Jagiellonian University 17 March 2010. Section "Cybertekst, ie, the text-machine."

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 25.02.2011 - 12:28

  2. Cybertext Killed the Hypertext Star

    Cybertext Killed the Hypertext Star

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 01.09.2011 - 14:14

  3. Digital Poetry: From Cybertext to Programmed Forms

    Digital Poetry: From Cybertext to Programmed Forms

    Zuzana Husarova - 01.09.2011 - 16:59

  4. Cibertextualidades: Introdução

    Cibertextualidades: Introdução

    Rui Torres - 02.12.2011 - 15:02

  5. Triálogo: Prelúdio dialogante a AlletSator

    Triálogo: Prelúdio dialogante a AlletSator

    Rui Torres - 02.12.2011 - 15:35

  6. Poesia luso-brasileira contemporânea: do verbo ao pixel

    This article intends to reflect upon the place of poetry in the teaching of literature and the formation of the reader, considering the recurrent metaphors and images in the interfaces of the
    discourse of the hypermedia, among the languages provided by the Technology of Information and Communication (TIC) in contemporary society. It aims to demonstrate the possible experiences of reading and aesthetic appreciation which offers to the user/reader for the exercise of creativity and autonomy in the construction of collective intelligence. In order to do so, it focuses on the production of the Luso-Brazilian literature in hypermedia with emphasis on the remarkable presence of the Portuguese experimental poetry in the construction of digital poetry and the Brazilian cyberliterature in present time.

    (Source: Author's Abstract)

    Rui Torres - 04.12.2011 - 17:52

  7. Cybertext Poetics: The Critical Landscape of New Media Literary Theory, A Review

    Cybertext Poetics: The Critical Landscape of New Media Literary Theory, A Review

    Patricia Tomaszek - 09.09.2012 - 22:21

  8. Cybertextuality

    Cybertexts are the pairs of utterance-message and feedback-response that pass from speaker-writer to listener-reader, and back, through a channel awash with noise. Cybertextuality is a broad theory of communication that draws on the cybernetics of Norbert Wiener (1894-1964) to describe how we manage these dual message-feedback cybertexts into being and that helps explain the publishing, the transmission, and the reception of all speech and text. Recursiveness, complexity, and homeostasis are three principles of cybertextuality. Because we are cognitively blind to how we create most utterances (language belongs to procedural memory, which can be recalled only by enacting it), we unselfconsciously model even our own language acts (not just ones by other people) simply in order to recognize and revise them. We observe or receive our own language acts before anyone else does. Our feedback is to represent those acts meaningfully. Mental modelling, as a feedback mechanism, is recursive. Our every utterance or output serves as input to another (possibly silent) uttering. Messaging-feedback is also complex.

    Alvaro Seica - 11.03.2016 - 15:10

  9. The Pleasures of Immersion and Interaction

    J. Yellowlees Douglas and Andrew Hargadon on the affective side of hypertexts via “schemas, scripts, and the fifth business.”

    Andre Lund - 05.10.2017 - 19:51

  10. Hypertext '97

    John Cayley reviews the Hypertext ‘97 Conference, which brought together representatives from corporate and academic sectors.

    Apologies: This is not a ‘balanced’ review of the Hypertext ‘97 conference, but only, as Ted Nelson would put it, one particular, packaged, ‘point of view’. I haven’t named all the names I should have or even many and I have not explicitly acknowledged the herculean efforts of the many organizers. Readers are referred to the full published conference proceedings, The Eighth ACM Conference on Hypertext, edited by Mark Bernstein, Leslie Carr, and Casper Osterbye (New York: ACM, 1997). My perspective is that of a practitioner of literary cybertext. This piece was written quickly as a draft towards a (probably shorter) review of the conference which is to be published in the UK-based periodical (presently a quarterly newspaper) of ‘digitalartcritique’ entitled Mute.

    tye042 - 18.10.2017 - 14:45