• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

electronic book review

  • about ebr
  • policies and submissions
  • subscribe
  • Essays
  • Gatherings
  • newsletter
  • Log In

digital futures of literature, theory, criticism, and the arts

determinability

Cybertext Theory: What An English Professor Should Know Before Trying

Primary Sidebar

other essays by
Markku Eskelinen
Cybertext Theory: What An English Professor Should Know Before Trying
Eskelinen responds in turn
Markku Eskelinen’s response
Markku Eskelinen’s response to Julian Raul Kucklich
Towards Computer Game Studies
other essays in
Joyce, Moulthrop, Jackson
My Body the Library: Janet, Body art, and World Wide Web site
by Michael Joyce
Reviewing the Reviewers of Literary Hypertexts
Cybertext Killed the Hypertext Star
by Nick Montfort
Of Tea Cozy and Link
The Pleasure (and Pain) of Link Poetics
by Scott Rettberg
electropoetics:
Other Essays in
No items found
On an Unhuman Earth
E-Literary Text in the Nomadic Cockpit
by Janez Strehovec
Recto and Sub-Verso
from the archive
All of Us
by William Major

Secondary Sidebar

ebr is an online, open access, peer-reviewed journal of critical writing produced and published by the emergent digital literary network.

  • subscribe to ebr
  • fictions present
  • first person
  • technocapitalism
  • writing (post)feminism
  • electropoetics
  • internet nation
  • critical ecologies
  • webarts
  • end construction
  • image + narrative
  • music/sound/noise
  • writing under constraint
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Footer

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Electronic Book Review (ebr ) is an online, open access, peer-reviewed journal of critical writing produced and published by the emergent digital literary network.

ISSN: 1553-1139

© 2018
ebr is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.