Lori Emerson examines how interfaces--from today's multitouch
devices to yesterday's desktops, from typewriters to Emily
Dickinson's self-bound fascicle volumes--mediate between writer and
text as well as between writer and reader. Following the threads of
experimental writing from the present into the past, she shows how
writers have long tested and transgressed technological
boundaries.
Reading the means of production as well as the creative works
they produce, Emerson demonstrates that technologies are more than
mere tools and that the interface is not a neutral border between
writer and machine but is in fact a collaborative creative space.
"Reading Writing Interfaces" begins with digital literature's
defiance of the alleged invisibility of ubiquitous computing and
multitouch in the early twenty-first century and then looks back at
the ideology of the user-friendly graphical user interface that
emerged along with the Apple Macintosh computer of the 1980s. She
considers poetic experiments with and against the strictures of the
typewriter in the 1960s and 1970s and takes a fresh look at Emily
Dickinson's self-printing projects as a challenge to the coherence
of the book.
Through archival research, Emerson offers examples of how
literary engagements with screen-based and print-based technologies
have transformed reading and writing. She reveals the ways in which
writers--from Emily Dickinson to Jason Nelson and Judd
Morrissey--work with and against media interfaces to undermine the
assumed transparency of conventional literary practice.
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