Gloss on Biopoetics; or, a Pilot Plan for a Concrete Poetry
Lori Emerson
October 13, 2007
P:nth-child(3)
Eduardo Kac writes for ebr on the attractions of the hologram as a malleable, fluid, and elastic medium for poetic expression.
Gloss on How to Do Words with Things
Stefanie Boese
October 6, 2007
P:nth-child(19)
Stephen Dougherty critiques the usefulness of systems theory in his review of Andrew McMurry’s Environmental Renaissance: Emerson, Thoreau, and the Systems of Nature, calling instead for “a new sense of how epistemology and ontology can complement one another.” Read the complete review here. Stephen Dougherty critiques the usefulness of systems theory in his review of Andrew McMurry’s Environmental Renaissance: Emerson, Thoreau, and the Systems of Nature, calling instead for “a new sense of how epistemology and ontology can complement one another.” Read the complete review here.
Gloss on Reading the Conflicting Reviews: The Naysayers Gerald Graff overlooked in Clueless in Academe
September 23, 2007
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Marjorie Perloff speaks of the ‘End of Humanities’ as having become a sub-genre of academic writing. See Douglas Barbour’s review of Perloff here. Marjorie Perloff speaks of the ‘End of Humanities’ as having become a sub-genre of academic writing. See Douglas Barbour’s review of Perloff here.
Gloss on How to Think (with) Thinkertoys: Electronic Literature Collection, Volume 1
Lori Emerson
October 23, 2007
P:nth-child(4)
In Christopher Funkhouser’s review of the ELC, he points out that the material gathered in this collection could hardly be more representative of what is happening in various digital genres of writing, or better presented. In Christopher Funkhouser’s review of the ELC, he points out that the material gathered in this collection could hardly be more representative of what is happening in various digital genres of writing, or better presented.
Gloss on How to Do Words with Things
September 22, 2007
P:nth-child(8)
Another Foucauldian work, like Livingston’s concerned with performativity and self-reference in literary theory, is Rey Chow’s Age of the World Target, given the third degree by reviewer Ken Hirschkop. Read the review here. Another Foucauldian work, like Livingston’s concerned with performativity and self-reference in literary theory, is Rey Chow’s Age of the World Target, given the third degree by reviewer Ken Hirschkop. Read the review here.