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  1. Mountain Rumbles

    "Mountain Rumbles" demonstrates the integral relationship between structure and content. To paraphrase Brother Antonius, who said the symbol IS the symbolized--and the symbolized IS the symbol, the structure IS the content--and the content IS the structure. To emphasize this relationship, "Mountain Rumbles" is based on the japanese kanji for mountain. These micro-hypertexts further show that we can have one-minute hypertexts--that connections are not based on the size of the content, but rather the content itself.

    Scott Rettberg - 12.10.2011 - 12:41

  2. WOE

    According to the description of WOE in the New Media Reader, where it was republished on a CD inserted into the book, it was "a hypertext that was a radical departure for author Michael Joyce from his modernist hypertext classic afternoon: a story. "WOE" combines narrative material with metafictional passages, typographic experiments, notes to and about hypertext theorists, and even images; it creates a heterogeneous browsing experience of the sort familiar to today's Web readers (or fans of Mark Z. Danielewski's House of Leaves)."

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 15.10.2011 - 20:45

  3. Turning In

    A hypertext coming-of-age novel.

    Scott Rettberg - 15.10.2011 - 21:03

  4. Notes Toward Absolute Zero

    Notes Toward Absolute Zero interweaves historical documents of the ill-fated Franklin expedition with the personal reminiscences of a woman in search of her hypnotist uncle and of the the man who, in turn, searches for her. Follow Jericho, Magel, and Winter as their lives intersect and diverge across an eerie landscape dotted with relics, forgotten lists, train wrecks, scraps from journals, ghost ships, poetry, postage stamps, Mesmer's propositions, and -- of course -- The Six Failures of Love.

    (Source: Publisher's description from Eastgate Catalog)

    Scott Rettberg - 16.10.2011 - 00:01

  5. A Life Set for Two

    A Life Set for Two is an animated hypertext poem programmed in Visual Basic that explores the "dynamic processes of thought and memory." The story unfolds through the metaphor of two different menus––one belonging to the male narrator recounting a failed affair and other belonging to his lover, whom readers come to know only through the eyes of the narrator.

    (Source: Author's website)

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 06.12.2011 - 13:08

  6. Everglade

    "Book-length hypertext poem, one of the first works of hypertext literature. Written in the C programming language. Shareware for DOS." (This description is from Robert Kendall's essay "The Birth of Electronic Literature".)

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 06.12.2011 - 13:47

  7. Gabriella infinita

    Gabriella Infinita es una obra metamórfica. Su presencia corre paralela a una intensa y a la vez voluble experiencia de escritura. Nace como toda obra artística: por gracia de una necesidad expresiva muy intima. Pero, apenas brota, empieza a buscar alocadamente su forma, como ávida de cuerpo, como presintiendo su fragilidad y su contingencia. Y termina comprendiendo que estaba destinada a la volatilidad.

    Pero esa conciencia siempre estuvo lejos de ser alcanzada fácilmente. Sufrió al comienzo, en su primera fase de formalización, la negligencia majadera de sus lectores; después, la terquedad imposible de su autor que le impidió mutar con libertad. Finalmente, hubo de someterse a la desintegración de sus elementos. Ahora, en su tercera metamorfosis, espera nerviosa, como una quinceañera asustada en su primera cita a ciegas, el encuentro con su lector.

    (Source: description from Gabriella Infinita, "historia"
    )

    Sandra Hurtado - 07.12.2011 - 18:21

  8. Hypertekst og Bringsværds "Faen"

    Et undervisningsopplegg for en 45 minutters time med universitetsstudenter hvor de leser og diskuterer Bringsværds "Faen" med utgangspunkt i definisjoner av hypertekst, diskusjoner om koherense og om multilinær struktur.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.12.2011 - 14:00

  9. A Party at Silver Beach

    Combining words and images in a narrative of love and new beginnings,  A Party at Silver Beach situates the reader at a party where visual images of the guests lead to their words. By clicking on graphic images of guests,  objects, or views from the windows, you move through the story like a guest at a party -- speaking to some guests, overhearing the conversations of others. As if at a real party,  you are invited to either stay for only a short time or to spend a longer time.  As at any party, where many of the guests are strangers, you are likely to discover only a few of the mysteries of their lives. Lovers come and go, missing each other, finding each other. And sporadic dark conversations punctuate the generally joyous experience of the celebration. 

    Judy Malloy - 21.12.2011 - 23:13

  10. Marble Springs 1.0

    Marble Springs, a complex and lyrical new work in the tradition of Spoon River Anthology and Winesburg, Ohio, explores the lives of the women who built the American West. Marble Springs invites the reader to explore a collection of poems discovered in the ruins of a church in an abandoned ghost town. The poems, like the lives of so many 19th century women, are anonymous, enticing the reader to discover the identity of the author hidden between the lines. (Source: Marple Springs - Eastgate Systems)

    Meri Alexandra Raita - 20.01.2012 - 11:51

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