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  1. Sleepless in Seattle

    First, IN.S.OMNIA operates from the premise that the domain of literature as such is no longer in synch with cultural experience in contemporary America. Rather than “look for ‘the next big thing’ in literature,” IN.S.OMNIA asks, “What if the next big thing already surrounds us, embedded in small gestures we perform every day? What if the next big thing is the realization that we have changed the way we use culture - remapping, rewiring, renetworking the same old pool of elements in new ways, adding to them furtive scribbles, seeking pleasures without naming them?

    tye042 - 25.09.2017 - 15:45

  2. Cyberinthian Ways

    Linda Brigham hypercontextualizes contemporary philosophy.

    Although a hard-copy book and a hypertext essay hardly present us with apples and oranges, this particular pair troubles the work of comparison. This trouble is not simply a matter of form. Content-wise as well, Arkady Plotnitsky’s interdisciplinary exploration of poststructural metaphysics (or “meta-physics”) and David Kolb’s meditation on the textuality of philosophy relate to each other in a fashion at once too intimate and divergent. Like Blake’s Clod and Pebble from the Songs of Experience, they are contraries, or, to pick up the theme, “complementary.” As Blake would insist, though, it is through such contraries that progress happens.

     

    tye042 - 26.09.2017 - 10:38

  3. Notes From the Digital Overground

    Mark Amerika on establishing an electronic publishing network in the no-man’s land between the commercial, the academic, and the underground.

    (Source: EBR)

    Filip Falk - 15.12.2017 - 17:41