User:Angeliki/Interfacing the Law/ research: Difference between revisions
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== '''Abstracts'''== | == Provisional research == | ||
=== '''Topics''' === | |||
* hypertext and feminism | |||
* personal collections | |||
* media activism | |||
* “traces” in pirate libraries | |||
* collective reading- and public space | |||
* intellect augmentation | |||
Secondary topics: | |||
piracy, hacking, back doors, black holes | |||
=== '''Abstracts'''=== | |||
==== ''Women Writers and the Restive Text: Feminism, Experimental Writing and Hypertext'' by Barbara Page ==== | ==== ''Women Writers and the Restive Text: Feminism, Experimental Writing and Hypertext'' by Barbara Page ==== | ||
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== '''Bibliography''' == | === '''Bibliography''' === | ||
Page, B., 1996. Women Writers and the Restive Text: Feminism, Experimental Writing and Hypertext. Postmodern Culture 6. <br /> | Page, B., 1996. Women Writers and the Restive Text: Feminism, Experimental Writing and Hypertext. Postmodern Culture 6. <br /> | ||
Wardrip-fruin, N., 2003d. You say you want a revolution? Hypertext and the Laws of Media, in: The New Media Reader. MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass, pp. 692–704. | Wardrip-fruin, N., 2003d. You say you want a revolution? Hypertext and the Laws of Media, in: The New Media Reader. MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass, pp. 692–704. |
Revision as of 15:40, 25 April 2018
Provisional research
Topics
- hypertext and feminism
- personal collections
- media activism
- “traces” in pirate libraries
- collective reading- and public space
- intellect augmentation
Secondary topics:
piracy, hacking, back doors, black holes
Abstracts
Women Writers and the Restive Text: Feminism, Experimental Writing and Hypertext by Barbara Page
In this text Page refers to the strong connection of hypertext and feminism, focusing on the unconventional writing of several female authors. The hypertextual way of writing provides a freedom and space for collaborative compositions and alternative interpretations of the text. This practice radicalise the narrow and patriarchal form of writing by being 'nonlinear, nonhierarchical, and decentering', and even fragmented. She gives an additional meaning to the term by referring to electronic writing, which is inclusive and 'interweaves' the media between them.
You say you want a revolution? Hypertext and the Laws of Media by Stuart Moulthrop
Bibliography
Page, B., 1996. Women Writers and the Restive Text: Feminism, Experimental Writing and Hypertext. Postmodern Culture 6.
Wardrip-fruin, N., 2003d. You say you want a revolution? Hypertext and the Laws of Media, in: The New Media Reader. MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass, pp. 692–704.