Didn't even think of hypertext lit, but the comparison should have been obvious. So I'll take the opportunity to ask: Any good books or resources you can suggest on the topic?
Well, I'll have to admit that hypertext theory is a young field and my I haven't done any reading on it in about five years and much of it was nearly a decade ago, so I may be a little dated here.
George Landow wrote a book simply called Hypertext (and later Hypertext 2.0). This serves as a good textbook on the theory and I remember it being a bit more on the technical end of things.
Most of my studies in college were far from this though. We would read things like Remediation by Jay David Bolter and Richard Grusin, Patchwork Girl by Shelley Jackson, and Afternoon by Michael Joyce, a hundred different little web texts by various authors, and other essays by Bolter. Then, we would debate and try to figure out the nature of the art form. Be warned that I'm more of a "tech-head" than a poet though, so I don't know if I'm really remembering the "best" resources.
And fortuitously, I found out about MIT's opencoursework today, so I just found this reference (http://ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/Writing-and-Humanistic-Studies/21W-765JSpring2003/Readings/).
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George Landow wrote a book simply called Hypertext (and later Hypertext 2.0). This serves as a good textbook on the theory and I remember it being a bit more on the technical end of things.
Most of my studies in college were far from this though. We would read things like Remediation by Jay David Bolter and Richard Grusin, Patchwork Girl by Shelley Jackson, and Afternoon by Michael Joyce, a hundred different little web texts by various authors, and other essays by Bolter. Then, we would debate and try to figure out the nature of the art form. Be warned that I'm more of a "tech-head" than a poet though, so I don't know if I'm really remembering the "best" resources.
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