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  1. Reading Hypertext

    In Reading Hypertext, Mark Bernstein and Diane Greco have selected the best and most important studies of hypertext reading and criticism, drawn from disciplines ranging from philosophy and classical philology to film theory and technocriticism. These indispensable studies reveal how much we now understand about the reading hypertext, and point the way for important new work.

     

    Source: Reading Hypertext

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 15.10.2011 - 20:05

  2. On Hypertext Criticism

    On Hypertext Criticism

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 16.11.2011 - 12:36

  3. New Directions in Digital Poetry: A Review

    New Directions in Digital Poetry: A Review

    Patricia Tomaszek - 12.07.2012 - 15:13

  4. Hyperizons: Hypertext Fiction

    This is a collection that documents the "hypertext fiction activity" between 1995-1997.

    Among its features are:

    • Approximately 230 citations to electronic fiction, its print precursors, and criticism
    • Approximately 100 annotated citations for selected works
    • Individual bibliographies of selected authors
    • Announcements about the field and links to related sites of interest

    Source: Michael Shumate (resume)

    The page was last updated in 1997 and disappeared from the Web shorty after this record was created with a link to an active site in August 2013 (PT).

    Patricia Tomaszek - 30.08.2013 - 18:13

  5. Review of Williams's How to be an Intellectual

    In this review of How to Be an Intellectual: Essays on Criticism, Culture, and the University, Christopher Findeisen analyzes Jeffrey J. Williams’s assessment of higher education in the United States. Linking the decline of funding for universities and colleges, rising student debt, the exploitation of academic labor, and the digital humanities, the review examines the omission of accounts of “the not-so-remarkable everyperson academic, the untenured, the up-and-comers, and the downtrodden.

    (source: http://electronicbookreview.com/thread/criticalecologies/properly)

    Malene Fonnes - 12.09.2017 - 15:03

  6. “Persist in Folly”: Review of Mark Greif, The Age of the Crisis of Man: Thought and Fiction in America, 1933-1973

    Afterthoughts on the end of the sixties, the death of the author, the rise of Theory and the fall of humanism.

    Source: Author's abstract

    Ana Castello - 16.10.2017 - 16:36

  7. The Primacy of the Object

    In his review of Martin Paul Eve’s Pynchon and Philosophy: Wittgenstein, Foucault and Adorno, Julius Greve situates this new book on Pynchon within the upheavals produced by speculative realism and contemporary discourses on materialism. In doing so, Greve reminds us of what was always already the case: the literary-philosophical relevance of Pynchon, which turns out to be all the more inescapable in contemporary political climates.

    Source: Author's abstract

    Ana Castello - 16.10.2017 - 17:41

  8. The Last Novel

    The Last Novel

    Ana Castello - 17.10.2017 - 14:56

  9. From Diversion to Subversion: Games, Play, and Twentieth-century Art

    Games and play occupied a central, if misunderstood, role in modern art in the twentieth century. Many art-historical narratives have downplayed the ways in which artists returned to play and to games as analogues to art practice, as metaphors for creativity, or as models for art criticism. The essays collected in this volume investigate the fundamental importance of supposedly nonserious activity and attend to the ways in which artists used play and games in order to reconsider their practice and to expand their critical strategies. With subjects ranging from early twentieth-century manifestations of games and play in Surrealism, Duchamp, Picasso, and Bauhaus photography to their repercussions in Fluxus, performance, public practice, and new media, these essays establish the diversity and potential of games and play and point toward an alternate trajectory in the development of modern art. (Taken from psupress)

    Jonatha Patrick Oliveira de Sousa - 06.10.2021 - 22:32