Hyper/text/theoryGeorge P. Landow, Professor George P Landow In his widely acclaimed book Hypertext George P. Landow described a radically new information technology and its relationship to the work of such literary theorists as Jacques Derrida and Roland Barthes. Now Landow has brought together a distinguished group of authorities to explore more fully the implications of hypertextual reading for contemporary literary theory. Among the contributors, Charles Ess uses the work of Jrgen Habermas and the Frankfurt School to examine hypertext's potential for true democratization. Stuart Moulthrop turns to Deleuze and Guattari as a point of departure for a study of the relation of hypertext and political power. Espen Aarseth places hypertext within a framework created by other forms of electronic textuality. David Kolb explores what hypertext implies for philosophy and philosophical discourse. Jane Yellowlees Douglas, Gunnar Liestol, and Mireille Rosello use contemporary theory to come to terms with hypertext narrative. Terrence Harpold investigates the hypertextual fiction of Michael Joyce. Drawing on Derrida, Lacan, and Wittgenstein, Gregory Ulmer offers an example of the new form of writing hypertextuality demands. |
From inside the book
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As an individual, this pale and uncontroversial character never mattered much to
us critics anyway, and then only as a construct on which to hang the baser
pleasures of the text; he is our poor and predictable cousin, slave to the rhythm,
lost in ...
By the end of the novel, Franz will learn the horror of his ways — most brutally
when he discovers the slave labor camp that adjoins the Nordhausen missile
factory. But despite this conversion, his rebuke to Leni hangs over the remainder
of the ...
onstrating fidelity, of silence under torture as a virtue (Spartan hardness), of
interrogation as figurative "basanizing" ("You give this slave of mine the third
degree [basanize]" — Aristophanes, The Frogs) (30). The migration of the term
into ...