essays Page 30 of 36

2001

01-Sep-2001
Primary Sounds

Reflections on Red/Yellow/Blue in the context of Music/Sound/Noise.

01-Sep-2001
Tattoo it in Skin: A Literary Prediction

RVV Rob Wittig, Scriptor, fast forwards to a future when teenagers in neo-nikes and neo-soccer jerseys recreate ye olden days of the True Hip Hop Troubadour, circa Y2K.

01-Sep-2001
Talking Back to the Owners of the World

Steffen Hantke on Tom LeClair's and Richard Powers's novelistic imaginations of terror.

01-Sep-2001
The Sonic Spectrum

Elise Kermani writes about her work with sound and invites readers to locate sounds of their own on the spectrum from noise to sound to music. database programming: Allison Hunter and Ewan Branda.

01-Sep-2001
To Clean the Ears

Kermani responds to LaPlante.

Unraveling the Tapestry of Califia

Jaishree K. Odin on the hyperfiction of M.D. Coverley.

01-Sep-2001
When You Can't Believe Your Eyes: Voice, Vision, and the Prosthetic Subject in Dancer in the Dark

Cary Wolfe investigates why the reviewers were so rattled by the Lars von Trier film, and in the process puts Jacques Derrida, Stanley Cavell, Slavoj Zizek, and Judith Butler into conversation.

15-Feb-2001
What Cybertext Theory Can't Do

A reluctant response to Markku Eskelinen's "Cybertext Theory: What An English Professor Should Know Before Trying," where Hayles discusses her admiration for Espen Aarseth's work... and the limitations within it she has perceived.

01-Feb-2001
Cybertext Theory: What An English Professor Should Know Before Trying

Considering hypertext as a subset of cybertexts, Markku Eskelinen offers seven examples of how to implement Espen Aarseth's seven-fold typology.

10-Jan-2001
Cyber|literature and Multicourses: Rescuing Electronic Literature from Infanticide

In response to Nick Montfort's review of Cybertext, N. Katherine Hayles coins an alternative term, cyber|literature.

10-Jan-2001
Of Tea Cozy and Link

Marjorie Coverley Luesebrink performs an autopsy on the hypertextual corpse.

01-Jan-2001
After the Post

For Daniel Punday, Bernard Siegert's historical materialism - a difficult synthesis of historical, literary, and institutional analysis - falls somewhere between Derrida and Foucault. But see also the review in ebr by historian Richard John, who considers Siegert in the line of Walter Ong, Elizabeth Eisenstein, and Harold Innis.

01-Jan-2001
Dali Clocks: Time Dimensions of Hypermedia

Stephanie Strickland investigates an epistemological shift in web-specific art and literature, from an understanding that is less about structure and more about resonance.

01-Jan-2001
Feeding the Global Spider

Linda Brigham sees Zygmunt Bauman's Globalization: The Human Consequences as a provocative introduction to our current environmental and economic predicament.

01-Jan-2001
New = Old, Old = New

Jan Baetens argues that Chris Ware's print-based comic book, Jimmy Corrigan, has already produced the revolution longed for by Scott McCloud - a revolution, however, that will not be digitized.

01-Jan-2001
Unfolding Laramée

Allison Hunter shows how an artist can be fully contemporary without digitizing, streaming, or projecting imagery. Presenting jacquard looms and punch card technologies from the 1950s, difference engines and magnetic core memory stacks, silicon chips in wood housing and digital code on 18th-century woven fabric, Eve Laramee manipulates history like a medium.

01-Jan-2001
Webarts

In spite of the millennial call for an end to issues in Winter y2k, ebr11 - a new issue - went online at the turn of the year 2000/2001. There would be yet another issue a year later ("Music/Sound/Noise") before the transition to the new interface could be completed.

2000

False Pretenses, Parasites, and Monsters

Tom LeClair surveys six gargantuan texts—both hyper- and print—and finds that size is not all that matters.

30-Dec-2000
German TV Troubles

Geoffrey Winthrop-Young takes the outside perspective on German media studies.

30-Dec-2000
Lexia to Perplexia:

hypertext? cybertext? hypermedia? webart? while new media critics debate the terms, Talan Memmott has produced the thing itself, a creative use of applied technology.