Posted on April 20, 2008 by cenantua
It’s most certainly a work in-progress, but for what it’s worth, I’m opening access to my hypertext nonfiction, ”Being Cenantua.” Personally, I consider the site currently on par with a construction site in an early stage (READER BEWARE — there are “dead links.” O.K., by definition, they don’t necessarily qualify as “dead links,” the hyperlinked pages just haven’t [...]
Filed under: Civil War Memory - General, Digital History, Reflections on "personal memory" of the Civil War | Tagged: " hypertext nonfiction, Being Cenantua, Being John Malcovitch, Cenantua's Blog, Civil War memory, Eastgate, electronic literature, George Landow, hyperlinks, hypermedia, hypertext, hypertext fiction, lexia, nodes, Roland Barthes, tag clouds, tag surfing | No Comments »
Posted on March 4, 2008 by cenantua
Just out of curiosity, I Googled “hypertext non-fiction” and then “hypertext fiction” to compare the number of hits that each would bring up. Remarkably, there were only 68 hits (though once I clicked on the second page of hits, I found only 23 active returns for the search. I should also note that when Googling [...]
Filed under: Digital History | Tagged: Digital History, hypertext fiction, hypertext non-fiction, Valley of the Shadow | 1 Comment »
Posted on March 1, 2008 by cenantua
After creating the category about my personal “memory” of the Civil War, I am left wondering if such memories can hypertextualized. But before I go on with this thought, let’s take a time out for a minute to see where I am going with this. NO, the historian isn’t losing his mind here. This bouncing [...]
Filed under: Digital History | Tagged: George P. Landow, hypertext, Hypertext 3.0, hypertext fiction, hypertext non-fiction, hypertextualization, Patchwork Girl, Shelley Jackson | No Comments »