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  1. Someone, Somewhere, with Something: The Origins of Figurski

    This essay by the author of Figurski at Findhorn on Acid documents the origins of this hypertext, from its first iteration as a print-based short story to its current version for the web.

    Dene Grigar - 07.09.2021 - 18:22

  2. The Distinctive Quality of Holeton's Hypertext Novel

    This essay by Michael Tratner provides both a historical account of the public reception to Figurski at Findhorn on Acid and critical commentary about it.

    Dene Grigar - 07.09.2021 - 18:45

  3. Hypertext Lake: Carolyn Guyer’s Quibbling or Lessons in Hypertext Reading

    If Michael Joyce’s afternoon, a story is the Yin of hypertext literature, then Carolyn Guyer’s Quibbling is the Yang: perhaps the ultimate hypertext of female sensitivity, poetics, and politics. Published in the autumn of 1992, Quibbling seems to be everything that afternoon, a story wasn’t. Instead of a single protagonist on a paranoid knowledge quest about those close to him and himself through a labyrinth of his fear and desire, the “digital rhapsody” [1] by this woman American author gives voice to a group of characters, four couples, without a distinct narrative centre towards which other voices would gravitate. As readers we are invited into their stories, their intellectual horizons, and into uncovering relations between these characters in the past and in the present. The whole work is broadly feminist, and as such it represents an innovative form of l'ecriture feminine [2] from the early 1990s with a fascinating, added value of experimentation with form in the electronic realm of hypertext.

    Dene Grigar - 07.09.2021 - 23:38