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Winner of the 2017 N. Katherine Hayles Award for Criticism of
Electronic Literature A CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title 2018 The
digital age has had a profound impact on literary culture, with new
technologies opening up opportunities for new forms of literary art
from hyperfiction to multi-media poetry and narrative-driven games.
Bringing together leading scholars and artists from across the
world, The Bloomsbury Handbook of Electronic Literature is the
first authoritative reference handbook to the field. Crossing
disciplinary boundaries, this book explores the foundational
theories of the field, contemporary artistic practices, debates and
controversies surrounding such key concepts as canonicity, world
systems, narrative and the digital humanities, and historical
developments and new media contexts of contemporary electronic
literature. Including guides to major publications in the field,
The Bloomsbury Handbook of Electronic Literature is an essential
resource for scholars of contemporary culture in the digital era.
Post-Digital charts the history of the digital revolution and
gauges its impact on contemporary literature, art, criticism, and
theory. Collecting more than 20 years' worth of major interventions
from the pioneering journal electronic book review, this landmark
2-volume set contains close to 100 seminal articles from leading
scholars, writers and digital artists, including Mark Amerika, Jan
Baetens, Serge Bouchardon, Kiki Benzon, R. M. Berry, Anne Burdick,
Stephen J. Burn, John Cayley, David Ciccoricco, Astrid Ensslin,
David Golumbia, Paul Harris, N. Katherine Hayles, Matthew G.
Kirschenbaum, Joseph McElroy, Brian McHale, Timothy Morton, Nick
Montfort, Stuart Moulthrop, John Durham Peters, Scott Rettberg,
Stephanie Strickland, Ronald Sukenick, Joseph Tabbi, Cary Wolfe,
Laura Dassow Walls and Rob Wittig. Post-Digital also includes new
essays chronicling the most recent, multimodal developments in the
literary field, a series of introductions by several generations of
ebr co-editors surveying the long history of thinking about the
digital, and a comprehensive bibliography of further reading.
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Agape Agape (Paperback)
William Gaddis; Introduction by Sven Birkerts; Afterword by Joseph Tabbi
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R373
R342
Discovery Miles 3 420
Save R31 (8%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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William Gaddis published four novels during his lifetime, immense and complex books that helped inaugurate a new movement in American letters. Now comes his final work of fiction, a subtle, concentrated culmination of his art and ideas. For more than fifty years Gaddis collected notes for a book about the mechanization of the arts, told by way of a social history of the player piano in America. In the years before his death in 1998, he distilled the whole mass into a fiction, a dramatic monologue by an elderly man with a terminal illness. Continuing Gaddis's career-long reflection on those aspects of corporate technological culture that are uniquely destructive of the arts, Agape Agape is a stunning achievement from one of the indisputable masters of postwar American fiction.
William Gaddis published only four novels during his lifetime, but with those works he earned himself a reputation as one of America's greatest novelists. Less well known is Gaddis's body of excellent critical writings. Here is a wide range of his original essays, some published for the first time. From "'Stop Player. Joke No. 4,'" Gaddis's first national publication and the basis for his projected history of the player piano, to the title essay about missed opportunities in America during the past fifty years, to "Old Foes with New Faces," an examination of the relationship between the writer and the problem of religion—this diverse collection displays the power of an autonomous literary intelligence in an age increasingly dominated by political and religious conservatism.
The convergence of twentieth-century narrative and technology is
one of the most important developments in current literary study.
Roughly a decade after the founding of the Society for Literature
and Science, and after the appearance of such influential books as
Kathleen Woodward's Culture of Information and William Paulson's
Noise of Culture, Joseph Tabbi and Michael Wutz have edited a
landmark volume that seeks to summarize this still-emerging field.
Through the essays and the wide-ranging overview provided by the
editors' introduction, Reading Matters shows how these theoretical
concerns can contribute to the practical study of narrative, and it
helps to make the field far more accessible to students and other
serious readers of fiction.
The twelve original essays, published here for the first time,
are the work of distinguished scholar-critics on both sides of the
Atlantic. They cover the range of contemporary literature, from the
canonical novels of high modernism and postmodernism through
subjects only recently put on the academic agenda, such as
cyberpunk and hypertext fiction.
In an age that has proclaimed the death of the novel many times
over, the editors and contributors argue persuasively for the
continued vitality of literary narrative. By responding in
ingenious ways to the capabilities of other media, they assert, the
novel has enlarged and redefined its territory of representation
and its range of techniques and play, while maintaining its
viability in the new media assemblage.
Focusing on works by Norman Mailer, Thomas Pynchon, Joseph McElroy,
and Don DeLillo, Joseph Tabbi finds that a simultaneous attraction
to and repulsion from technology has produced a powerful new mode
of modern writing--the technological sublime.
A CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title 2018 The digital age has had a
profound impact on literary culture, with new technologies opening
up opportunities for new forms of literary art from hyperfiction to
multi-media poetry and narrative-driven games. Bringing together
leading scholars and artists from across the world, The Bloomsbury
Handbook of Electronic Literature is the most authoritative
available handbook to the field. Crossing disciplinary boundaries,
this book explores the foundational theories of the field,
contemporary artistic practices, debates and controversies
surrounding such key concepts as canonicity, world systems,
narrative and the digital humanities, and historical developments
and new media contexts of contemporary electronic literature.
Including guides to major publications in the field, The Bloomsbury
Handbook of Electronic Literature is an essential resource for
students of contemporary culture in the digital era.
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Agape Se Paga (Spanish, Paperback)
William Gaddis; Translated by Miguel Martinez-Lage; Contributions by Joseph Tabbi; Prologue by Rodrigo Fresan
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R554
Discovery Miles 5 540
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Ships in 12 - 19 working days
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A dying man lies in bed and embarks on a mental monologue on the
mechanization of the arts, represented in the appearance of a
mechanical piano. His reflections become a piercing diatribe
against modern society and its deep-seated desires for fame and
fortune. This novel is a heartbreaking story that does not grant
any reprieve, and a superb diagnosis of the effects of technology,
not only in the arts, but at the very core of contemporary everyday
life. "Un hombre que yace en cama moribundo se embarca en un
monologo mental a partir de la mecanizacion de las artes,
representada en la aparicion de la pianola. Su reflexion termina
por ser una punzante diatriba contra la sociedad moderna, con sus
arraigados anhelos de fortuna y reconocimiento. Esta novela es un
relato desgarrador que no concede respiro alguno y que es un
magnifico diagnostico de los efectos de la tecnologia, no solo en
el arte, sino en lo mas hondo de la vida cotidiana contemporanea."
In 2002, following the posthumous publication of William Gaddis'
collected nonfiction, his final novel, and Jonathan Franzen's
lengthy attack on him in ""The New Yorker"", a number of partisan
articles appeared in support of Gaddis' legacy. In a review in
""The London Review of Books"", critic Hal Foster suggested a
reason for disparate responses to Gaddis' reputation: Gaddis'
unique hybridity, his ability to ""write in the gap between two
dispensations,"" between science and literature, theory and
narrative, and ""different orders of linguistic imagination.""
Gaddis (1922-1998) is often cited as the link between literary
modernism and postmodernism in the United States. His novels -
""The Recognitions"", ""JR"", ""Carpenter's Gothic"", and ""A
Frolic of His Own"" - are notable in the ways that they often
restrict themselves to the language and communication systems of
the worlds he portrays. Issues of corporate finance, the American
legal system, economics, simulation and authenticity, bureaucracy,
transportation, and mass communication permeate his narratives in
subject, setting, and method. The essays address subjects as
diverse as cybernetics, the law, media theory, race and class,
music, and the perils and benefits of globalization. The collection
also contains an unpublished interview with Gaddis from just after
the publication of ""JR"" and an essay on the Gaddis archive, newly
opened at Washington University in St. Louis.
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