Posts Tagged ‘Gilbert Sorrentino’

Aberration Of Starlight

Recently read: Aberration of Starlight by Gilbert Sorrentino.

When I first started getting serious about reading literary weblogs back in 2004, Sorrentino was one of the first authors I was turned onto. I read this back in early 2005 and then again this January while preparing my article for the next issue of The Quarterly Conversation after referencing it.

This is a wonderful novel, chronicling a disastrous day in the lives of a number of characters. I love the blending of styles, especially the question and answer portion, more on that soon, and voices. I’ll have more thoughts on this novel in the coming weeks.

Bookmark and Share

Spring 2008 Symposium Notes

I have put together Toni & I’s notes from our collaborative presentation entitled What Is A Text? A Political History Of Texts From Gutenberg To Electronic Literature And Beyond into a single PDF for viewing. I am very proud of our work during the spring semester. We worked together and pooled our interests, both unique and similiar, to examine the political history of how “texts” are defined.

All of this will be going back into my MA thesis, which due to some financial constraints, has not seen much new research but a few new branches in my thinking have developed. More on that soon. I can happily announce as well that I started the first version of a rough draft a few days ago. Once I have something remotely resembling a semi-completed draft I will leave a continually updated link on the sidebar for those who would like to follow along.

Bookmark and Share

Feral Hypertext : When Hypertext Literature Escapes Control

A new idea! Instead of a weekly update of what I am reading for my thesis and the project Toni and I are working on, how about I just blog my research daily as it goes on. Bear with me: I am bouncing between a number of sources so posts will go back and forth between them often. My goal is to upload one per day. In fact, if all goes well the focus of this blog will shift for the time being to my current, in progress, research and writing almost exclusively.

Oh, I will get back to War Prayers soon.

History Lesson
My first entry will be for Jill Walker-Rettberg‘s Feral Hypertext : When Hypertext Literature Escapes Control. Dr. Walker’s paper offers a lot of useful information on two fronts. There is plenty of good historical information about hypertext and many useful arguments for what Toni and I are working towards in our project, which is moving towards a focus on how texts have been, and are, defined and how this effects electronic literature. Walker argues that hypertext before the World Wide Web is “domesticated…bred in captivity” (1). She continues by arguing that hypertext was, however, always intended for individual users. In 1974, Ted Nelson insists that ordinary people need to have access to personal computers. Thirty years before, in an essay for The Atlantic in 1945, Vannevar Bush also argues for this:

Consider a future device for individual use, which is a sort of mechanized private file and library. It needs a name, and to coin one at random, “memex” will do. A memex is a device in which an individual stores all his books, records, and communications, and which is mechanized so that it may be consulted with exceeding speed and flexibility. It is an enlarged intimate supplement to his memory.

Continuing the historical look, Nelson creates the term “hypertext” in 1965. Two years later, Julia Kristeva does the same for Intertextuality. What becomes important here for my own thinking is, as Walker notes, the similarities between contemporary critical theory and hypertext have been pointed out numerous times, including, the work I am most familiar with, George Landow’s Hypertext 2.0 from 1997. Walker is quick to point out, as Landow is as well, that the “relationship between hypertext and critical theory is not that simple” (3).

Walker continues by offering a brief history of preweb hypertext systems like Hypercard and Storyspace:

Though the first personal computers became available in the late seventies, the first home hypertext systems weren’t available till the late eighties. Peter Brown’s GUIDE [8] was followed by HyperCard, a hypertext authoring system that was packaged with Macintosh computers. Soon afterwards, Eastgate’s Storyspace became available, first for the Macintosh and later for the PC. Tinderbox, released from Eastgate in 2001, is probably the tool that most closely follows in the footsteps of these systems, which were very much created in the spirit of Vannevar Bush and the desire for an intimate extension to memory. These hypertext authoring systems allow an individual to organise his or her personal notes and create his or her own self-contained hypertext which can be shared with others by copying it onto a diskette or CD or by emailing it as a single file. While Tinderbox and HyperCard were primarily intended as organisational tools, Storyspace was explicitly developed as a tool for fiction authors.

The Evolution Of The Writerly Text
Distribution of literary hypertext before the World Wide Web still shared many of the characteristics of the bounded text. Like a copy of Sorrentino’s Aberration of Starlight in paperback, a CD of Shelley Jackson’s Patch Work Girl still restricted readers to a “sustained reading of a self-contained work” (5). The rise of cheaper personal computers and the World Wide Web began to allow anyone with an Internet account to publish on the web, link, and be linked to. This led to what Walker refers to as “feral hypertext,” hypertext that is “no longer tame and domesticated” (1). For my own work, the most important point here is that hypertext on the World Wide Web in general cannot be tamed any longer. Hypertext is very unruly and rather disobedient!

As Walker points out, literary hypertext that has gone, in her words, “feral” demands of the reader “to accept structures that are neither predefined nor clearly boundaried” (2). Collaboratively written works like The Unknown and digital poetry like Megan Sapnar and Ingrid Ankerson’s Cruising defy the boundaries of the bounded text. An interactive memoir like Caitlin Fisher’s These Waves Of Girls is an unruly and rather untamed account of growing up told with audio and visual links. After making sure to note that Landow and others have pointed out the differences between critical theory and hypertext while pointing out their similarities, Walker expresses the idea, which I strongly agree with, that theorists involved with critical theory and intertextuality are already arguing that texts are unruly and extremely disobedient. Literary hypertext on the World Wide Web is an evolution of the writerly text. Hypertext that is feral is, as I see it, an interactive expression of the writing of the work on authorship of theorists like Foucault, Derrida, and Barthes.

Bookmark and Share

War Prayer 001

War Prayer 001

Drew and Theresa lay on his bed, staring up at the ceiling. It’s three years later and, for the first time in a very long time, they can feel something other than resigned despair flooding through their bodies. The first day of classes ended a few hours ago. She rolls over to his side of the bed and grins at him.

In class Drew stares at his classmates. Was it something he said? Did he speak too loudly while answering a question? Sometimes he did that. It was an unconscious action on his part; he did not even realize he was doing it before it was too late and he already embarrassed himself.

Drew seemed to embarrass people in public a lot. When he ran into a friend this morning, he found himself stuck in the middle of some pathetic scam conversation with a few young women. He was not sure if what he said was inappropriate, or just plain awkward, but his friend bummed out on him hard for ruining his chance to impress the ladies. He might have talked about a book, Sorrentino or Calvino or fucking John Barth. Who cares. It was probably Borges anyway.

Drew knew it was his own fault anyway. He never learned how to function amongst pleasant society and, honestly, if someone tried to teach him he was probably not paying attention. Theresa had tried to teach him the so-called rules of Non-Conventional Society but he seems to have royally fucked that one up too.

None of that really matters much though because those peers are part of a bigger puzzle now. Eat, drink booze, fuck once a week on that special night, pop out a couple babies. Drew’s peers are now sponsored by Pepsi and Budweiser. Pizza Hut has them in its jukebox

Amber has been dead for three years and the towers gone almost as long. Drew turned twenty five in between. He seems to have worn out his welcome; nothing had ever made him feel more alive.

Everything he has ever been taught turned out to be wrong. Drew leaned over and kissed Theresa gently on the mouth. Here, where it is just you and me, none of that matters anymore.

They kissed again. Everything went away. For now, all Drew could do is keep praying.

Bookmark and Share

RIP Gilbert Sorrentino

The loss of Gilbert Sorrentino is a great one. Like Scott over at Conversational Reading I also discovered Sorrentino via Litt blogs, namely his own and Derik at MadInkBeard. I’ve only read Aberration of Starlight, but I want to read more soon.

Updates

Bookmark and Share

Gilbert Sorrentino

After hearing about Gilbert Sorrentino from other blogs over winter break I am going to check out Aberration of Starlight.

Bookmark and Share
Return top