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  1. Stitching Together Narrative, Sexuality, Self: Shelley Jackson's Patchwork Girl

    Landow, who praises Patchwork Girl as "the finest hypertext fiction thus far to have appeared," appreciates Jackson's mastery of hypertextual collage, which reveals, he suggests, how analogous techniques are at play when we conceptualize our gendered identities.   (Source: Eric Dean Rasmussen)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 11.03.2011 - 16:11

  2. Hypertext with Consequences: Recovering a Politics of Hypertext

    At first glance, it can be difficult to understand what hypertext, a technology, has to do with social and political issues of gender and identity. After all, given adequate resources and training, anyone can create and use a hypertext authoring system. And while problems of differential access to resources and training are pressing, they are often viewed as better belonging to the social realms of education and resource allocation than to those of hardware and software; they do not impinge on the design of hypertext systems except peripherally -- or so the argument goes.

     

    Introduction retrieved from https://cyberartsweb.org/cpace/ht/greco1.html

    Kine-Lise Madsen Skjeldal - 03.10.2021 - 21:35