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Cybernetic Engines
Cybernetic Engines
Cheryl Ball - 21.08.2013 - 12:00
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Hyper-What?: Some Views on Reader Discomfiture with Hypertext Fiction
Hyper-What?: Some Views on Reader Discomfiture with Hypertext Fiction
Cheryl Ball - 21.08.2013 - 15:47
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Exploiting Hypertext’s Potential for Teaching Gender Studies
The aim of this article is to show what feminist electronic literature can contribute to the study of gender theories and feminist literature. The study of feminist hypertext fictions and the use of hypertext as a teaching tool are facilitated by the intrinsic characteristics of the electronic medium, complementing the electronic medium and providing alternative possibilities in the learning process: collaborative authorship, multivocality, textual openness, non-hierarchical and rhizomatic structures, neo-kathartic effects and open publishing. Teaching feminist electronic literature using the hypertext offers the possibility of updating and discussing gender through a medium that permits rearranging the hypertext, better organized analyses of intertextuality and fostering the study through association and connections, which is the way the human brain works. The teaching method proposed pursues the objective of studying narratives about gender taking advantage of the new technologies without losing dialogues in class as intuitive learning process.
Maya Zalbidea - 22.08.2013 - 19:32
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Against Information: Reading (in) the Electronic Waste Land
Andrew Klobucar argues that a new iPad app for The Waste Land demonstrates, despite the developer's intentions and Eliot's fears, that the symbolic form of the database is irrepressible. According to Klobucar, Eliot bemoans the cultural impact of new media and technological innovation, though his poem--particularly through Pound's editorial notes and Eliot's added annotations--employs the structure of a database. The app for The Waste Land attempts to mitigate this tension by promoting a single legitimate version of the poem, though the app's structure ultimately works against that model, as it frees readers from the imposed authority of singular narrative.
Jill Walker Rettberg - 27.08.2013 - 11:21
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Tracing the Growth of a New Literature
Michael Shumate has been charting hypertext fiction activity on the Web at his site, Hyperizons, for more than two years. In this article, he surveys and critiques the state of hypertext fiction on the Web.
Source: CMC
Patricia Tomaszek - 30.08.2013 - 18:23
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Codeworld
Codeworld
Davin Heckman - 06.09.2013 - 16:53
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Introduction to "Codework/Surveillance"
Introduction to "Codework/Surveillance"
Davin Heckman - 06.09.2013 - 17:23
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Stalking the Wild Hypertext: The Electronic Literature Directory
Stalking the Wild Hypertext: The Electronic Literature Directory
Patricia Tomaszek - 14.09.2013 - 14:42
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Challenging Tongues: The “Irreducible Hybridity” of Language in Contemporary Bilingual Poetry
Contemporary bilingual poetry provides readers with an opportunity to explore and better understand how contemporary artists address the reality of their linguistic contexts. These works pose a challenge to traditional canonical (often national) literatures; furthermore, bilingual poets are keenly attuned to the ways language use represents the personal and political values at stake for their cultures. Bilingual poetry functions as a site of translation where languages interact within the text without traditional demarcations of original and translated text, representing a larger ideological challenge to institutional hierarchies that are often imposed on language. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the Internet has fostered bilingual poetry; the quality and proliferation of these works emphasise the need for more critical recognition of this form of expression. The friction, fluidity, cacophony, and subversive impulse of bilingual poetry embodies the convergence of enmity and rapport experienced by the very real speech communities that give them context.
Source: Author's Abstract
Patricia Tomaszek - 18.09.2013 - 14:23
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CyberLondon: A Virtual City for the Posthuman? Literary Reflections on the Changing Patterns of our Relationship with the Metropolis in the Information Era
CyberLondon: A Virtual City for the Posthuman? Literary Reflections on the Changing Patterns of our Relationship with the Metropolis in the Information Era
Maria Goicoechea - 07.10.2013 - 13:31