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Home Page for Hyperliterature, Alan Liu, English 165HL

Study Materials
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Required Readings

(Outline numbers below are for ease of reference only; see Schedule for order of readings)

Required Books and Hypertext Works
  Links in this section are to descriptions on commercial sites. (Policy statement on links to commercial sites.)

The following books or hypertext works (CD or diskette) are available at the UCSB Bookstore:
  1. Espen J. Aarseth, Cybertext: Perspectives on Ergodic Literature (Johns Hopkins UP, 1997)
  2. Roland Barthes, S/Z (Noonday, 1991)
  3. M.D. Coverley (Marjorie C. Luesebrink), Califia (2000) (for PC, or Mac with PC-emulator)
  4. Shelley Jackson, Patchwork Girl (1996) (for PC or Mac)
  5. Michael Joyce, afternoon, a story (1986) (for PC or Mac)
The following required work must be individually ordered through an online vendor (e.g., Amazon.com) or purchased from a local store (if available). The work is a computer "game" that cannot be purchased like other works through the bookstore's text department:
  1. Riven

Required Course Reader Available at the Alternative Copy Shop
(Contents in Alphabetical Order)
 


  1. Jorge Luis Borges, "Funes the Memorious" (1954) and "The Garden of Forking Paths" (1941)
  2. Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus (1980), pp. 3-38
  3. J. Yellowlees Douglas, The End of Books - Or Books Without End? pp. 89-106 (2000)
  4. Fredric Jameson, Postmodernism, or The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism (1991), pp. 38-45, 107-29
  5. Friedrich A. Kittler, Discourse Networks, 1800/1900 (1985), pp. xii-xviii from David Wellbury's "Foreword" and pp. 206-229 from "The Great Lalula"
  6. George P. Landow, Hypertext 2.0 (1997; 1st ed. 1992), pp. 2-6, 11-20, 33-38
  7. Janet H. Murray, Hamlet on the Holodeck (1999), pp. 135-47, 154-82
  8. Ted Nelson, excerpt from Literary Machines 90.1 (1990)

Required Online Works
(Contents in Alphabetical Order)
 
 


  1. A Beginner's Guide to HTML (NCSA)
  2. Beyond Interface: Net Art and Art on the Net
  3. Vannevar Bush, "As We May Think," Atlantic Monthly (July 1945)
  4. Ed Falco, Self Portrait With Father (1999)
  5. William Gibson, Agrippa (A Book of the Dead (1992)
  6. Carolyn Guertin
  7. Shelley Jackson, "Stitch Bitch: The Patchwork Girl" (1997)
  8. Michael Joyce and Carolyn Guyer, Lasting Image (2000)
  9. Deena Larsen, Bubbles
  10. Olia Lialina
  11. Marjorie C. Luesebrink, "Califia—Historial Notes" (2001)
  12. Stuart Moulthrop, Reagan's Library
  13. Christy Sheffield Sanford, Light/Water (1999)
  14. Barry Smylie and Alan Sondheim, Sailing
  15. Storyspace program (created by Jay David Bolter, Michael Joyce and John B. Smith; work begun in 1984) [Learn about this influential, early hypertext authoring program by exploring the descriptions and links on this page]
  16. John Updike, "Books Unbound, Life Unraveled," orig. pub. in New York Times, Op-Ed Week in Review Section, 18 June 2000: 15

Supplementary Resources
The following is just the beginning of a compendium of additional resources. Students in the course (and visitors from elsewhere) are encouraged to suggest additional resources by e-mailing the instructor. The idea is to build a limited, highly selective set of supplementary materials.
 

General Resources on Hypertext Literature
  1. Stuart Moulthrop, "A Subjective Chronology of Literary Hypertext"
  2. Electronic Literature Directory (the Electronic Literature Organization's extensive database of authors, works, genres, and publishers of electronic literature; includes links to online hypertext works)
  3. Eastgate Systems, Inc. (the influential, early publisher of hypertext literature)
    1. Eastgate Reading Room
  4. Carolyn Guertin and Marjorie Coverley Luesebrink, The Progressive Dinner Party (2000) ("tour of the works of women who write hypertext and hypermedia literature on the WWW"; includes links to the surveyed works)
  5. Carolyn Guertin, Queen Bees and the Hum of the Hive: An Overview of Feminist Hypertext's Subversive Honeycombings (1998) includes links to hypertext literature)
  6. Carolyn Guyer's Web Hyperfiction Reading List (1995)
  7. Hypernova Hypertext
  8. Janet H. Murray's Resource Page for Hamlet on the Holodeck
  9. Rita Raley, Hypermarks ("an index of online fiction, poetry, installations hypertext/ually (in)formed")
  10. Sarah Fordham Sharpe, Hypertext Fiction
  11. Michael Shumate, Hyperizons (extensive guide to hypertext and hyperliterature)
  12. Scott Stebelman, "Hypertext and Hypermedia: A Select Bibliography"
  13. SocioSite Page on Hypertext and Hypermedia
  14. VoS Resources on Hypertext Research & Theory
  15. Transcriptions Annotated Guide to Hypertext Literature

Hypertext Theory, Recent Research on Hypertext Literature

Selected Canonical Texts of Hypertext Theory:

  1. Vannevar Bush, "As We May Think," Atlantic Monthly, July 1945
  2. Ted Nelson, Literary Machines (1981) (online excerpts published by Feed) | "Ted Nelson and Xanadu" (Electronic Labyrinth)
  3. George P. Landow, Hypertext 2.0: The Convergence of Contemporary Critical Theory and Technology (1997) [first version of this book published 1992] For online excerpts, see: Hypertext: The Convergence of Contemporary Critical Theory and Technology (chap. 1) & "Hypertext: An Overview"
  4. Jerome McGann, "The Rationale of Hypertext"

Selected Criticism of Hypertext Literature

  1. Robert Coover, "Literary Hypertext: The Passing of the Golden Age" (2000) (Feed)
  2. Jan Van Looy, Hypertext: A Select Bibliography (1998)
  3. Franco Minganti, "Updating (Electronic) Storytelling" (1997)
  4. Michael Shumate, "Hypertext Fiction on the Web" (1996)

State-of-the-Art Research and News on Hypertext Literature:

  1. Deena Larsen and Peter J. Nürnberg, ed., Proceedings of the CyberMountain Colloquium (1999)
  2. Hypertext Kitchen

Home Pages of Hyperliterature Authors
  1. Carolyn Guyer
  2. Shelley Jackson
  3. Michael Joyce
  4. Deena Larsen
  5. Olia Lialina's Home Page
  6. Marjorie C. Luesebrink ("M.D. Coverley")
  7. Stuart Moulthrop
  8. Christy Sheffield Sanford
  9. Barry Smylie

Selected Journals and Zines Publishing Hypertext Literature
  1. ArcHive
  2. BeeHive
  3. Iowa Review Web
  4. Riding the Meridian
  5. Salt Hill

Hypertext Literature Organizations, Programs, Events
  1. Electronic Literature Organization
  2. Electronic Literature Organization Chats (at LinguaMoo: type "@go eliterature")
  3. alt.hypertext Usenet newsgroup
  4. trAce Online Writing Community

Hypertext Literature Courses (courses with substantial or interesting online content)

Class 1
  1. Be a Paper Engineer (Shell Centre for Mathematical Education Publications, Ltd.)

Class 2
  1. "Typing with Edward Falco" (interview with Falco) (Blue Penny Quarterly, 1996)

Class 3
  1. "Roland Barthes (1915-1980)" (biography and bibiography) (Pegasos)
  2. Roland Barthes (Encyclopedia Britannica article on Barthes) (Britiannica.com)
  3. Roland Barthes Web Page (Chad Tuttle)

Class 4
  1. Britannica.com on Vannevar Bush
  2. The Garden of Forking Paths (deep, rich page on Jorge Luis Borges) (The Modern World: The Libyrinth)

Class 5
  1. Ted Nelson, Literary Machines (1981) (online excerpts published by Feed) | "Ted Nelson and Xanadu" (Electronic Labyrinth)
  2. Howard S. Becker, "A New Art Form: Hypertext Fiction" (1995) (on the contextual "art world" of hypertext; includes a description of the Storyspace authoring interface)
  3. Jerome McGann, "The Rationale of Hypertext"

Class 6: Project Workshop

For help with Web authoring, HTML, and page design, see the following resource guides developed by Transcriptions:

  • Web-Authoring Basics (basic outline of the process required to download, revise, and upload web pages associated with Transcriptions courses)
  • Resources for Web-Authoring (design and how-to advice for both beginning and advanced Web authors; includes links to HTML and design style guides, help with images, and examples of good and bad design)

Class 7
  1. VoS Resources on William Gibson
  2. Machine Literature (lecture for Prof. Liu's English 25 by Jeremy Douglas and Elizabeth Freudenthal)

Class 8
  1. Carolyn Guyer's Home Pages
  2. Michael Joyce's Home Page
  3. Deena Larsen's Home Page
  4. Olia Lialina's Home Page (a must see)
  5. Stuart Moulthrop's Home Page
  6. Christy Sheffield Sanfor's Home Page
  7. Barry Smylie's Home Page
  8. John Updike Bio and Bibliography (Pegasos)

Class 9: Project Workshop

Class 10
  1. Michael Joyce's Home Page
  2. Michael Joyce, "Twelve Blue"
  3. Deleuze and Guattari Internet Resources (Jon Beasley-Murray)

Class 11
  1. Michael Joyce's Home Page
  2. Michael Joyce, "Twelve Blue"

Class 12
  1. Shelley Jackson's Home Page
  2. Shelley Jackson, "My Body A Wunderkammer"
  3. George P. Landow, "Stitching together Narrative, Sexuality, Self: Shelley Jackson's Patchwork Girl"

Class 13
  1. Online Discussion with Espen J. Aarseth in 1997 (a series of e-mail postings in a discussion conducted by John Unsworth, U. Virginia; follow the "next message in the thread" links)

Class 14: Project Workshop

Class 15
  1. Marjorie C. Luesebrink ("M.D. Coverley"), Home Page
  2. M.D. Coverley, Fibonacci's Daughter
  3. José Luis Orihuela, "Interview with Marjorie Luesebrink" (2000) (Critica)

Class 16
  1. Marjorie C. Luesebrink ("M.D. Coverley"), Home Page
  2. M.D. Coverley, Fibonacci's Daughter
  3. José Luis Orihuela, "Interview with Marjorie Luesebrink" (2000) (Critica)

Class 17
  1. Cyan's Official Home Page for Myst and Riven
  2. Riven Unofficial Home Page (Jim Stephenson)
  3. Jim Stephenson, "World Builder: A Conversation with Robyn Miller"
  4. "Don't Cheat at Riven: The Riven Hint Site" (Decent Designs, Inc.)

Classes 18-19: Project Performances

 


Related Transcriptions Courses
 


 


Guides and FAQs
 

J. Guides to Online Research
  1. Transcriptions Annotated Guide to Hypertext Literature (esp. for Eastgate publications available for one user at a time in the Transcriptions studio)
  2. Online Research Resources (library catalogues, digital text archives, periodical indices, etc.; includes both general-access and UCSB-only resources)
  3. Online Reference Resources (dictionaries, thesauri, atlases, encyclopedias, etc.)
  4. Online Resources for Writing and Speaking (grammer and style guides, writing tips, advice on oral presentations, etc.)
  5. Evaluating & Citing Online Resources (checklists, exercises, examples, and annotated links; also includes a printable form to use in tracking and evaluating online sites)

 


K. Guides to Technology in Transcriptions Courses (see Technology overview)
  1. Web-Authoring Basics (basic outline of the process required to download, revise, and upload web pages associated with Transcriptions courses)
  2. Resources for Web-Authoring (design and how-to advice for both beginning and advanced Web authors; includes links to HTML and design style guides, help with images, and examples of good and bad design)

 


 

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Thanks to Marjorie Luesebrink, Rita Raley, and Stuart Moulthrop, who consulted on works to include in this course.
This page is part of the Transcriptions Project
Page content by Alan Liu | Graphic design by Eric Feay
(revised 4/3/01 )

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Policy on Links to Commercial Sites

Where useful, this course site links to the bookseller's or publisher's page carrying the most substantive additional information about a work at the time the link was created. Often such a page offers not only publishers' descriptions but tables of contents, reviews, and suggestions of related books. This is done as a service to students, and is not intended to endorse any particular commercial or other venture.

For links to publishers' sites from many nations, see Publishers' Catalogues Home Page. For an annotated guide and links to major online booksellers, see Best Big On-Line Bookstores. For online comparison shopping of books, see Acses. For other publisher and bookseller sites, see Voice of the Shuttle: Publishers.