Hypertext: The Convergence of Contemporary Critical Theory and Technology"In this insightful and readable volume, Landow explores the relationship between contemporary literary and social theory and the latest advances in computer software."--Voice Literary Supplement. "A useful book for understanding the effect technology is having on scholarship."--Semiotic Review of Books. "Landow['s]... presentation is measured, experiential, lucid, moderate, and sensible. He merely points out that the concept hypertext' lets us test some concepts associated with critical theory, and gracefully shows how the technology is contributing to reconfigurations of text, author, narrative, and (literary) education."--Post Modern Culture. "Good news for teachers who are not too sensitive about their intellectual authority... Bad news for print culture."--Times Literary Supplement |
From inside the book
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Page 102
... suggest what hypertext fiction might be like or have deduced the rules of hypertextual narrative from first principles ... suggests that those poems and novels that most resist one or more of the characteristics of literature associated ...
... suggest what hypertext fiction might be like or have deduced the rules of hypertextual narrative from first principles ... suggests that those poems and novels that most resist one or more of the characteristics of literature associated ...
Page 107
... suggests several lines of inquiry . One could inquire if it is good or bad that linear narratives inevitably embody some morality or ideology , but first one should determine if rejecting linearity necessarily involves rejecting ...
... suggests several lines of inquiry . One could inquire if it is good or bad that linear narratives inevitably embody some morality or ideology , but first one should determine if rejecting linearity necessarily involves rejecting ...
Page 188
... suggests an analogy between the Gutenberg revolution and what he terms the informatization of languages : “ Lan ... suggest , individual texts and entire languages that do not transfer to a new information medium when it becomes ...
... suggests an analogy between the Gutenberg revolution and what he terms the informatization of languages : “ Lan ... suggest , individual texts and entire languages that do not transfer to a new information medium when it becomes ...
Contents
The Definition of Hypertext and Its History as a Concept | 3 |
Vannevar Bush and the Memex | 14 |
The Nonlinear Model of the Network in Current Critical Theory | 23 |
Copyright | |
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Hypertext: The Convergence of Contemporary Critical Theory and Technology George P. Landow No preview available - 1992 |
Common terms and phrases
appears argues Austen authorship Barbara Herrnstein Smith Barthes beginning Brown University Bush canon collaborative concept maps connections contemporary context course created Critical Theory culture Derrida Dickens documents Douglas Engelbart effects electronically linked encounter English example exist experience fact graphic Gregory Ulmer human hyper HyperCard hypermedia Hypertext and Critical hypertext fiction hypertext systems individual information technology Intermedia Jacques Derrida kind Landow language learning lexias linear Literary Theory literature machines main text manuscript Marxist materials McLuhan means medium memex Memoriam metatext multiple narrative Nigeria Norman Meyrowitz notion novel overview particular passage permits poem Politics of Hypertext present print technology printed text problem produce provides reader reading Reconfiguring Literary Education relations Robert Coover role scholarly Soyinka suggests textuality tion University Press Vannevar Vannevar Bush Victorian visual Wole Soyinka words writing York