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Posts Tagged ‘John Barth’

Books Read in 2009

1. Laurie Halse Anderson-Fever 1793
2. Paul Auster-Travels In The Scriptorium
3. John Barth-Further Fridays: Essays, Lectures, and Other Nonfiction, 1984 – 1994
4. John Barth-On With The Story: Stories
5. A.C. Bradley-Shakespearean Tragedy: Lectures on Hamlet, Othello, King Lear and Macbeth
6. Judith Butler-Gender Trouble
7. Italo Calvino-The Baron In The Trees
8. Italo Calvino-Difficult Loves
9. Italo Calvino-Numbers In The Dark & Other Stories
10. Italo Calvino-T Zero
11. Albert Camus-The Myth Of Sisyphus & Other Essays
12. Junot Diaz-The Brief Wondrous Life Of Oscar Wao
13. Junot Diaz-Drown
14. Terry Eagleton-Literary Theory
15. Umberto Eco-The Name Of The Rose
16. Michel Foucault-History Of Sexuality: Volume One
17. Gary Gutting-Foucault: A Very Short Introduction
18. Homer-Iliad
19. David Hume-Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion & The Posthumous Essays
20. George Landow-Hypertext 3.0: Critical Theory and New Media in an Era of Globalization
21. Milorad Pavic-Dictionary Of The Khazars
22. Plato-The Symposium
23. Michael Pollan-The Omnivore’s Dilemma
24. Susan Sontag-Illness As Metaphor & Aids and Its Metaphors
25. Gilbert Sorrentino-Aberration Of Starlight
26. Robert Louis Stevenson-Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde (read by TOM BAKER)
27. Bram Stoker-Dracula
28. Virginia Woolf-The Second Common Reader
29. Virginia Woolf-Three Guineas
30. Epic of Gilgamesh


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My Digital Humanities Origin

In its original draft, this was part of the introduction to my MA thesis.  After some discussion, I ended up pulling this out to keep my thesis more focused on the matters at hand.  I really like what I wrote here so I decided to excerpt it on my domain for my readers.  I wrote this right around this time last year.

Everything I found in electronic literature upon discovery, the intellectual aesthetic and interplay with computers, which had been my cherished companion since childhood, I had been looking, searching, for in my literary studies.  As a child I had played some text adventures, known as interactive fiction, and certainly remember their printed cousins the Choose Your Own Adventure book. I loved how interactive those books were and the agency which readers were given to decide their own fate and reading path.  Growing up, I had a lot of problems with motor development and coordination.  This led to many other problems including very poor penmanship. A wise teacher, when I was in elementary school, suggested my parents buy me a computer. She claimed that I would end up ahead of the curve because personal computers were going to takeover classrooms before I left for college. Wisely, my parents took her advice and purchased an Apple II for me to do my school work on and, because I did not play well with other children, to have an outlet for play and creativity.

Long before I became an avid reader in my teens, my creativity came almost exclusively from computers. Game designer Jane McGonigal’s recent weblog post about her experience creating detailed narratives out of Apple II games that did not already have them like Summer Games brought back memories from my own childhood. I had a similar experience at almost the same time by creating forms in a word processing program with different countries and names. I created brief backgrounds for each character and had them compete against each other on screen. Scandal, same gender romance, athletic achievement, and other intrigues played out in this interpretation of my gaming experience. I would not call that literature, obviously, but I tell this story to show how my creativity was electronically nourished before I embraced print culture later in my teens.

I have been on the Internet since sometime in early 1995. Immediately I became involved with participatory online culture by writing fan fiction, posting to newsgroups and listservs, chatting on Internet Relay Chat (IRC) and, on and off, creating journals which nowadays would be called a weblog. At the same time, I published print based punk rock fanzines periodically until 2005 when I began Signifying Nothing, a webzine, archive of my earlier fanzines, and podcast devoted to my endeavors in hardcore punk which continue to this day.

My interest in electronic literature came to fruition while taking a senior seminar on postmodernism with Scott Rettberg in the spring of 2004. While being turned onto writers like Italo Calvino, John Barth, Jorge Luis Borges, and theorists like George Landow, Roland Barthes, and Julia Kristeva I realized that not only were these fiction writers exactly what I had longed for all of my life from literature, but the bridge between literary theory I fell in love with from Kristeva and Barthes, which I had struggled with until this time, and computers which Landow and others like Rettberg himself bridged via their theories was a dream come true. The beginning years of my college career were filled with frustration, failure, and difficulty. The first step of my recovery came when I embraced electronic literature.

Reading hypertext fiction and the theories of Barthes and Kristeva in Rettberg’s seminar improved my readings of previously read authors like Faulkner, Woolf, and Wallace. I began researching electronic literature and exploring the links on Rettberg’s weblog. Through these links I was able to explore the work of other hypertext and New Media theorists like Nick Montfort, Angela Thomas, and Jill Walker. I experimented with and clicked through Rettberg’s hypertext novel, The Unknown, and began actively participating in the sticker novel he authored with Montfort. As the semester wound down, two classmates and myself began our own weblogs, inspired with Rettberg and Walker especially, and I moved mine to its own domain later that summer.

Since the rise of the novel the past few centuries have had some hypertextesque works of literature. Novels like Tristram Shandy, Infinite Jest, and Ulysses can seem to those familiar with the workings of electronic literature to have qualities which “stand out for the first time.” (Landow 1982) When I read Sterne’s novel in an undergraduate course on the history of the novel, I came in one morning and remarked to my professor that the novel had a lot of the qualities of hypertext fiction which I was learning about in Rettberg’s seminar on postmodernism the same semester. Without knowledge of electronic literature I would have never made the connection, which made my reading of Sterne’s novel much more pleasurable. Experimental works of literature like Pavic’s Dictinary Of The Khazars and Nabakov’s Pale Fire also exude qualities which are emphasized by an understanding and familiarity with hypertext and electronic literature.

As Janet Murray argues in Hamlet On The Holodeck: The Future Of Narrative In Cyberspace, “the impending dissolution of Yugoslavia,” in Dictinary Of The Khazars, “is preconfigured by the fragmentary account of a mythical lost tribe” of three separate, conflicting, dictionaries (Murray 37). The “multicursally” seen in Pale Fire has been seen as a branch between not only modernism and postmodernism but as a text that has hypertextesque qualities (Aarseth 8). Writers like Robert Coover, a longtime advocate of electronic literature, Borges, and other postmodernists from France and South America also write literature which embodies many aspects of hypertext fiction.


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Weekly Reader

  • According to her monthly Web Site column, Jeanette Winterson is creating a children’s show for the BBC.
  • Scott Esposito on the role of research in Infinite Jest.  Also see the comment section for some discussion from myself and others on the difference between the sort of notes Wallace and Borges created for their imaginary works.
  • Jacket Copy on John Barth’s The Floating Opera
  • Henry Jenkins on the role of fan fiction as critical commentary on texts.
  • The new issue of Open Letters is, as always, worth your time.

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Weekly Reader

  • Amanda French’s creative use of Ada Lovelace Day to discuss Mary Shelley.  I really like her argument that Shelley was the first science fiction novelist.
  • Having read a lot of John Barth’s essays in the past year, I found Conversational Reading’s post discussing suggestions for reading his fiction to be quite timely.
  • Emily Short on the role of agency in Interactive Fiction.
  • Lauren Elkin discusses the new collection of Susan Sontag’s journals in the new issue of The Quarterly Conversation.

This week’s video doesn’t need much explanation. Here is Black Sabbath playing War Pigs in 1970.


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Barth On Poe’s Pym

Last year, around this time, I would have loved to have had Barth’s essay on Poe’s Arthur Gordon Pym for when I was writing essays in Dr. Bluemel’s class or for general classroom discourse. I was pleasantly surprised to find Barth had written about Pym; this novel seems to have a very poor reputation. Leslie Fielder and Borges both wrote about Pym (the latter a strange essay about the use of the color white in the novel). I found the novel to be interesting, not enough to write a paper about, but my classmates more or less did not.


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War Prayer 025

(sex in general is stupid)

War Prayer 025

The more Drew rejected sex and all of its mind numbing idiocy, the more it came to occupy his every waking thought. The roll of a pair of hips, the toned arms of another, the seductive, alluring, mind of a third. He became obsessed with his idealized concept of what love should be. But he continued to deny it had anything to do with sex. The more he denied, his imaginary world became more developed.

This denial became a game. He could excuse his fantasies by saying he would never act on them, never try to recreate them in the real world. At the end of the year, the tag for books read that year was rather sad and small on his weblog’s tag cloud. So much time wasted on sex that could have been spent on Barth or Sorrentino or hypertext fiction or adhering a sticker somewhere.

Drew and Theresa made love often during this period, trying to recreate that pair of hips and mashing it up with the third’s alluring mind. Sex became as meaningless for them as it was in real life.


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Further Fridays

Recently read: Further Fridays: Essays, Lectures, & Other Nonfiction, 1984-1994 by John Barth.

This is another excellent collection of Barth’s work, this time from 1984-1994. A lot of my favorite authors, including Borges, Poe, and others, are discussed. I knew Barth had some interest in electronic literature, but it was still a nice surprise to see some thoughts on theorists like George Landow and a long discourse on N. Katherine Hayles’ writing about chaos theory.

In the coming weeks I will have plenty more to say about specific essays.


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