• 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

philip larkin

British Poetry at Y2K

Primary Sidebar

other essays by 222
John Matthias
British Poetry at Y2K
The Haunting of Benjamin Britten
Working Progress, Working Title [Automystifstical Plaice]
electropoetics:
Other Essays in
No items found
Creating New Constraints: Toward a Theory of Writing as Digital Translation
by Jan Baetens
The Visual Music Imaginary of 88 Constellations for Wittgenstein: Exploring Philosophical Concepts through Digital Rhetoric
by Giovanna di Rosario, Nohelia Meza
Robert Creeley’s Radical Poetics
from the archive
No. No. [Novel not to die

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.