Search

Search content of the knowledge base.

The search found 2 results in 0.009 seconds.

Search results

  1. Old Wine in New Bottles

    English version of "Gammel vin in nye skinnsekker" published in Norwegian in Vagant 1/2010.

    The article addresses several works of electronic literature which take as their basis print works from other periods: Shelley Jackson's remix of the Frankenstein story in Patchwork Girl, Barry Smylie's new media version of Homer's Illiad, and Chris Ault's play with Jeanette Winterson's Sexing the Cherry in "Hot Air".

    Scott Rettberg - 26.03.2012 - 09:06

  2. The materialities of close reading: 1942, 2009

    Today, we not only see video games and online role-playing games interpreted, in print-based scholarly journals, by way of classical literary and narrative theory (to the dismay of the radical ludologist), but we also see the inverse: classical novels interpreted by way of role-playing games staged in computerized, simulated environments (as in Jerome McGann's IVANHOE Game). The use of classical theory for the study of contemporary video games and video games for the study of classical literature, however, does not necessarily mean that we now inhabit a mixed up muddled up shook up literary-critical world. In fact, these examples might mark opposite sides of a continuum of critical practice, and underscore the logic of analyzing a text in a given medium with the tools of a different – and complementary – medium.

    Audun Andreassen - 20.03.2013 - 09:54