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  1. Description
  2. Requirements
  3. Faculty
  4. Courses
  5. Special Activities & Events

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Literature & Culture of Information Specialization

An Undergraduate Specialization in
the UCSB English Department


LCI News

Upcoming and Recent Events:

Spring 2008: LCI Film.Literature.Software Series Event: Primer (Screening and discussion. May 7th, 7-9PM, South Hall 2635). The Film.Literature.Software series brings together undergraduate students, graduate students, and faculty to discuss films, fiction, poetry, games, software, and other works related to new media and new technologies.

LCI Students at English Dept. Graduation CeremonySpring 2006 : LCI Film.Literature.Software Series Event: Short Stories of Robert A. Heinlein: "Life Line" and "All You Zombies" (discussion, May 22, 4:30-6:30, South Hall 2635) The Film.Literature.Software series brings together undergraduate students, graduate students, and faculty to discuss films, fiction, poetry, games, software, and other works related to new media and new technologies.

Spring 2006 : LCI Film.Literature.Software Series Event: Second Life (discussion, May 11, 4:30-6:30, South Hall 2635) The Film.Literature.Software series brings together undergraduate students, graduate students, and faculty to discuss films, fiction, poetry, games, software, and other works related to new media and new technologies.

Winter 2006 : LCI Film.Literature.Software Series Event: bodysong (screening and discussion, Feb 13, 6:30-8:30, South Hall 2635) The Film.Literature.Software series brings together undergraduate students, graduate students, and faculty to discuss films, fiction, poetry, games, software, and other works related to new media and new technologies.

Fall 2005: LCI Film.Literature.Software Series Event: The Agrippa Files (exhibition, panel, and reception Dec 1, 4:0-6:00, Library 3591) The Film.Literature.Software series brings together undergraduate students, graduate students, and faculty to discuss films, fiction, poetry, games, software, and other works related to new media and new technologies.

Fall 2005: LCI Film.Literature.Software Series Event: Gattaca (screening and discussion, Nov 22, 5:30-7:30, South Hall 2509) The Film.Literature.Software series brings together undergraduate students, graduate students, and faculty to discuss films, fiction, poetry, games, software, and other works related to new media and new technologies.

Spring 2005: Seniors Sara Holmes and David Prodan receive their LCI specialization certificates at the English Department's graduate ceremony on June 12, 2005. LCI junior Julie Boggs (holding envelope) receives the second-place Kieth Vineyard Scholarship creative writing award for her "Rafiq, As Is."

Spring 2005: LCI Film.Literature.Software Series Event: Serial Experiments Lain (screening and discussion, May 26, 5:30-7:30, South Hall 1415) The Film.Literature.Software series brings together undergraduate students, graduate students, and faculty to discuss films, fiction, poetry, games, software, and other works related to new media and new technologies.

Fall 2004, and Winter and Spring 2005: For the first time, the English Dept. is offering a LCI version of its English 10 "Introduction to Literary Study" course: English 10 LCI. Taught in Fall and Winter by Jeremy Douglass, this quarter Lisa Swanstrom is teaching it, TR, 5-6:40 HSSB 1206. This version of English 10 will address interactions between literature and media (or information technologies). The primary texts for the course will include print texts and digital productions, as well as productions in other media as the instructor chooses. Students will learn techniques and vocabulary of analytic discussion specific to these media. The class will include instruction in research and writing in print and digital environments. Click here for the course Web site.

Summer 2004: With the aid of another UCSB Instructional Improvement Grant, the LCI developed an online pedagogical resource called the English Department Knowledge Base (EDKB). The EDKB is designed to allow course instructors to share teaching materials and students to draw upon the accumulated research and other materials of an array of English Dept. courses.

Summer 2003: The LCI received a UCSB Instructional Improvement Grant that will fund the development of experimental pedagogy for the English Department's newest technology-assisted classroom, South Hall 1415 (which will feature multiple, networked laptops for student use during classes).

June 16, 2003: The LCI graduates five students in its second year of operation. Congratulations to: Beau Brennan, Stephen Gandel, Sarah Helena Bristow, Patrick Mirjahangir, and Donna Wang.




Description of LCI


The UCSB English Department encourages upper-division students with particular literary/critical interests to pursue them formally by selecting one of the new specializations in the major. The specialization in Literature and the Culture of Information (supervised by the department's Transcriptions Project) brings the perspective of the humanities to the concept of "information" that many students will Cyborg Shakespeare Variorumengage with professionally and personally all their lives. In particular, Literature and the Culture of Information compares the forms, media, institutions, and aesthetics of the "information revolution" to similar revolutions in the past—e.g., the print revolution. The goal is to ask what the "well-read" have to offer the "well-informed," and vice versa. What was beautiful, enlightening, or cruel in the project of orality or literacy and their literatures? How does the project of information compare? And how might the insights of past ages of language be used to improve our contemporary age? Courses offered by the specialization in Literature and the Culture of Information hybridize the theory, practice, and literature of contemporary information culture with studies of the earlier information media of oral discourse, manuscripts, and print and the literature they embodied.




Requirements


LCI students must be English majors at UCSB. Requirements are any 4 elective courses in the "Literature and the Culture of Information" specialization. LCI students are also invited to participate each year in such special events as a colloquium, discussion with a faculty member or visiting scholar, or field trip to an organization related to information culture. Upon graduating from UCSB, LCI students receive a certificate of completion in the LCI specialization from the English Department.

Signing up for the Specialization: To sign up for the specialization or for information about course requirements, etc., contact Ann Wainwright, English Department Staff Undergraduate Advisor (wainwright@english.ucsb.edu; 893-8711). For other information about the specialization, contact its co-directors, Prof. Alan Liu (ayliu at english.ucsb.edu) and Rita Raley (raley at english.ucsb.edu).




LCI Faculty

 

  • LCI FacultyAlan Liu (LCI Co-Director): digital culture and new media studies, literary theory, cultural studies and postindustrialism, British Romantic literature and art; major Web project: Voice of the Shuttle; recent book: The Laws of Cool: The Culture of Information, Stanford Univ. Press, 2003 (biography; more info)
  • Rita Raley (LCI Co-Director): digital textuality, electronic culture, globalization and global culture, cultures of colonialism and imperialism, history of the university; recent article, "Interferences: [Net.Writing] and the Practice of Codework," Electronic Book Review, 2002; books in progress: Global English and the Academy and Transfers: Textuality and the Digital Aesthetic (biography)
  • Yunte Huang: poetics and technology, modernism, Transpacific studies; recent books: Transpacific Displacement: Ethnography, Translation, and Intertextual Travel in Twentieth-Century American Literature (2002) and Shi: A Radical Reading of Chinese Poetry (1997); translator into Chinese of Ezra Pound's The Pisan Cantos; books in progress: "The Deadly Space Between": Literature and History in the Age of Transpacific Imagination and Poetry and Globalization: Essays in the Poetics of Medium and Translation (biography)
  • Christopher Newfield: American culture after 1830, literary and social theory, affect, race, sexuality, California, corporate culture, and the history of the university; recent book: Ivy and Industry: Business and the Making of the American University, 1880-1980 (2004); books in progress: The Empowerment Wars, which explores the literature, management theory, and everyday life of cubicle dwellers in corporate America, and Starting Up, Starting Over, an eyewitness account of the underside of the "New Economy" in Southern California (biography)
  • Carol Pasternack: Old and Middle English literature; history of the English language; oral and textual theory; gender in the Middle Ages; recent book: The Textuality of Old English Poetry, Cambridge Univ. Press, 1995; book in progress on The Individual, the Family, and the Text in Anglo-Saxon England (biography)
  • William Warner: Eighteenth century, the novel, literary and cultural theory, history of 20th century media (from film to Internet), law and literature (free speech and censorship); director of The Digital Cultures Project; recent book: Licensing Entertainment: the Elevation of Novel Reading in Eighteenth Century Britain (Univ. of California Press, 1998); book in progress: American Networks: From 18th Century Committees of Correspondence to the Internet (biography)



LCI Courses

LCI Instruction

The following undergraduate courses are created and staffed for the LCI by the Transcriptions Project (which also teaches graduate seminars on information culture). Course web sites are normally created shortly before each course is offered.

2008-2009
Fall
  • English 10LC: Introduction to Literary Study--Serial Media (instructor: Charlotte Becker).
          This course will explore practices of serialization beginning with the innovative phenomenon of 19th-century serial fiction, and will extend to analyses of the ways that various media—including radio, television, and the internet—have subsequently adopted and adapted serial formats. Discussion and reading topics will include the authorial practices, copyright issues, economic concerns, and social/cultural responses related to serial media. Through these discussions we will develop a vocabulary to discuss narrative techniques that make a serial format effective, and to describe the unique features of each series with which we engage. Major coursework will include a piece of online serial fiction (written in collaboration with classmates) and a critical essay on a serial publication.
          Required Texts:
          Charles Dickens, David Copperfield
          Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, The Hound of the Baskervilles
          Henry James, Henry James: Selected Stories
          Course reader from ASUCSB (available in September)


  • English 10LC: Introduction to Literary Study (instructor: Mike Frangos).
          [Description TBA]


  • English 147VP: Media History and Theory (instructor: Carol Pasternak).
          Printed editions of medieval texts give only the barest suggestions of what these texts might have meant to their contemporaries because they experienced them either in oral performance, possibly with music and even movement, or in manuscript, sometimes highly decorated and with commentary in the margins or between the lines, always unique. In this class, we will examine medieval texts with the goal of figuring out how they were meaningful at the time of their production and/or performances. In addition to edited texts, we will look at manuscript facsimiles (digital and print) and a few actual medieval manuscripts in order to see the traces of oral composition and performance and see how the texts were written and read. And we will consider the impacts of distinctive information technologies on ‘literature’ and ‘information.’ Among the literary texts we will study are Beowulf, psalms, Middle English lyrics, Sir Orfeo, and parts of Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales. Webpage authoring will be part of the work.
Winter
  • English 122NW: Narratives of War (instructor: Rita Raley).
          This course examines twentieth-century narratives of war from the perspective of our contemporary moment. It thus does not aim to be historically comprehensive; instead our reading will be focused on certain questions and themes, including smart war; total war; just war; military intervention; models of the enemy; trauma; and the reformulation of human rights in the context of the "war on terror." Print narratives will include Pat Barker, Regeneration (and short selections of WWI poetry by Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen); Joe Sacco, Safe Area Goražde: The War in Eastern Bosnia, 1992-1995; Tim O'Brien, The Things They Carried; Etel Adnan, Sitt Marie Rose; and others. Theory and criticism will include Ernst Friedrich, Jordan Crandall, Paul Virilio, James Der Derian, Susan Sontag, Regarding the Pain of Others, and Manuel De Landa, War in the Age of Intelligent Machines. Films will include Apocalypse Now and West Beirut. Games and other media projects will include September 12; Antiwargame; America's Army; Full Spectrum Warrior; and Baghdad <> San Francisco. (Media projects such as The Great Game will illuminate the shift from representation to information visualization.) We will also consider the rhetoric and function of war reporting and discuss excerpts from films such as The Mills of the Gods, War Feels Like War, Gunner Palace and Jarhead.
          There will be two papers and a comprehensive final exam. This course will count toward the undergraduate specialization in Literature & Culture of Information but is designed for a general audience; LCI students will compose a web project to substitute for one of the papers. All students should be prepared to attend separate film screenings or to make alternate arrangements to see the films we will discuss in the course (DVDs and videos will be on reserve in Kerr Hall).


  • English 147A: Media History and Theory: Theorizing Adaptation--Translation and Mutation (instructor: Bishnupriya Ghosh).
          This course examines adaptation as a mode of translation geared to increase the life span of a text: adaptation is both reinterpretation (recoding, exchange, invention) and evolution (appropriation, updating, excision). Taking film to be our major media practice, we will look at several texts (fiction, non-fiction, feature films, plays) that are “adapted,” in order to consider a series of questions pertinent to adaptation theory: what is translated into film? What kinds of semiotic codes are at work in such translation? What is the common term of exchange? What kinds of value are produced in these acts? What context governs these acts of production? How are they received? These queries are ultimately aimed at a larger inquiry: can there be such a thing as “adaptation theory”? And if so, what are its disciplinary constraints? Students will be expected to watch five or six films outside of class time (time equivalent to the one-two hours you would spend preparing for a class), participate in class discussions, and write a research paper on a topic of their choice.
          This course will include one and a half weeks on digital translations of television or graphic novels, and will give students the option of doing projects on new media.
          Required Texts:
          Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness (1902)
          James Naremore ed., Film Adaptation (2000)
          Course Reader (Pick up at Associated Students)


  • English 149: Media and Information Culture--Literary Imagination and Virtual Reality (co-instructors: James Donelan and Alan Liu) (5-unit course with seminar meetings and a lab).
          Because of the recent, shared emphasis in many fields on digital methods, scholars in the humanities, arts, social sciences, and sciences increasingly need to collaborate across disciplines. This course reflects theoretically and practically on the concept of literary study by asking students to choose a literary work and treat it according to one or more of the research paradigms prevalent in other fields. Students, for example, could choose a story or poem to model, simulate, map, visualize, encode, text-analyze, sample, storyboard, blog, or redesign as a game, database, hypertext, or virtual world. What are the strengths and weaknesses of literary interpretation, close reading, or theory by comparison with other research methods?

Spring
  • English 10LC: Introduction to Literary Study-- (instructor: TBA).
          [Description TBA]


  • English 10LC: Introduction to Literary Study-- (instructor: TBA).
          [Description TBA]


  • English 197: Upper-Division Seminar--Poetry Lab (instructor: Yunte Huang).
          [Description TBA]
2007-2008
Fall
  • English 10LC: Introduction to Literary Study-- (instructor: Gerald Egan).
          [Description TBA]

  • English 10LC: Introduction to Literary Study-- (instructor: Bret Brinkman).
          [Description TBA]

  • English 147A: Theorizing Adaptation--Translation and Mutation (instructor: Bishnupriya Ghosh)
         This course examines adaptation as a mode of translation geared to increase the life span of a text: adaptation is both reinterpretation (recoding, exchange, invention) and evolution (appropriation, updating, excision). Taking film to be our major media practice, we will look at several texts (fiction, non-fiction, feature films, plays) that are “adapted,” in order to consider a series of questions pertinent to adaptation theory: what is translated into film? What kinds of semiotic codes are at work in such translation? What is the common term of exchange? What kinds of value are produced in these acts? What context governs these acts of production? How are they received? These queries are ultimately aimed at a larger inquiry: can there be such a thing as “adaptation theory”? And if so, what are its disciplinary constraints? Students will be expected to watch five or six films outside of class time (time equivalent to the one-two hours you would spend preparing for a class), participate in class discussions, and write a research paper on a topic of their choice.
          (This course can be taken for the Literature and Culture of Information specialization. The course will include one and a half weeks on digital translations of television or graphic novels, and will give students the option of doing projects on new media.)
          Required Texts:
          Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness (1902)
          James Naremore ed., Film Adaptation (2000)
          Course Reader (Pick up at Associated Students)

  • English 197: Senior Seminar, The Material Lyric (instructor: Carol Pasternack).
          A study of short poems from Anglo-Saxon England to the 21st century for their materiality of performance and publication as well as their ability to speak across time and beyond their original material forms and textual conventions. Texts will include lyrics from the Old English Exeter Book ("Wanderer," "Seafarer," "Wife's Lament," riddles); Harley lyrics; sonnets; Blake's Songs of Innocence and Experience; hypertext lyrics.

  • English 197: Senior Seminar, Dystopian Fictions (instructor: Rita Raley).
           This course cannot be repeated and is limited to upper-division English majors only. The ubiquity of dystopian themes in contemporary culture is perhaps entirely to be expected. As we will see, imagining post-apocalyptic or otherwise catastrophic futures can be read as one means of cultural critique. We shall thus examine these dystopic visions of a spectacular future as a critical engagement with the present. In our reading and film viewing we will encounter varied agents, institutions, and systems of social change, among them biotechnology (viruses, genetic engineering, cloning); media technologies; late capitalism; the intensification of state power; the "war on terror"; and ecological disaster.
          Texts:
          Anthony Burgess, A Clockwork Orange
          Kazuo Ishiguro, Never Let Me Go
          Margaret Atwood, Oryx and Crake
          Aldous Huxley, Brave New World
          Octavia Butler, The Parable of the Sower
          Philip K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said
    Essays by Mike Davis, Lieven De Cauter, and others. Graphic fiction will include Warren Ellis, Transmetropolitan and Anthony Lappé and Dan Goldman, Shooting War. Films will include Videodrome, Brazil, and Children of Men.
Winter
  • English 10LC: Introduction to Literary Study--Modern Interpretations of the Medieval (instructor: Lydia Balian).
          This course will provide students with an introduction to literary analysis by examining interpretations of the medieval after the medieval period by means of a comparison of medieval texts with interpretations of the medieval via text, film, and digital media, such as video games. Our critical examination of these various forms of media will be directed by a few overriding questions: Has medieval literature been idealized since the medieval period? Has it been caricatured? How is medieval literature relevant to us today? In terms of media and technology, additional questions arise, such as: How does literature and technology intersect? How do they diverge? Do different media forms affect our perception of the content?

  • English 10LC: Introduction to Literary Study--Modernism 2.0 (instructor: Mike Frangos).
          This course will provide an introduction to techniques in reading and analyzing literary texts from a variety of genres by means of an overview of key sources in modern and contemporary literature beginning with the revolution in literary form initiated in the early 20th century. Attending to “culture” as itself another “text” to be read alongside literature, we will consider developments unique to the scene of the modern such as the “New Woman” and feminism, fashion and self-fashioning, race and sexuality. As we develop skills in traditional approaches to the interpretation of poetry and fiction, we will remain self-conscious about how our own approaches to literature have changed as new media technologies have dramatically altered how we read and view texts. In addition to sharpening skills in critical analysis through traditional academic papers, students will use “Web 2.0” applications including blogs, wikis, social networking, video and photo sharing, mashups and machinima, to document the class’s own evolving relationship with the literary text. This course functions within the English department’s “Literature and the Culture of Information” specialization.

  • English 149: Media and Information Culture -- Literary Imagination and Virtual Reality (instructor: Alan Liu) (5-unit course with seminar meetings and a lab).
          This course reexamines the nature and function of literature by comparing it to new kinds of imaginative experience available though today's digital media. How does literary experience work in an imaginative work of fiction or a poem? How does such imaginative experience compare to the way a computer simulation, game, or virtual reality environment affects the user? Students will be create, and write about, projects that reflect on the relation between literature and virtual reality on the basis of concrete cases (e.g., by replotting a novel as a computer game or blog, role-playing literary interpretation using the Ivanhoe Game, playing an "interactive fiction," building a simulation of a literary universe in the NetLogo program, building an interactive animation of a poem using the Scratch program, staging or performing a literary work in the Second Life virtual world, etc.). The lab component of the course teaches technological skills and allows students to collaborate on projects.
Spring
  • English 10LC: Introduction to Literary Study-- (instructor: Paxton Hehmeyer).
          This course provides an introduction to literary interpretation with particular attention to the intersections of technology and literature. In pursuing our focus on technology, we will closely examine the relationship between different media and how those media define or influence the content of a work. In doing so we will ask questions fundamental to the study of literature: What is a text? What is literature's relationship to the world? Who is an author and what does it mean to write? Who is a reader and what does it mean to read? How have these concepts been defined historically?

  • English 10LC: Introduction to Literary Study-- (instructor: David Roh).
          [Description TBA]

  • English 122 NW: Narratives of War (instructor: Rita Raley) (lecture course).
          This course examines twentieth-century narratives of war from the perspective of our contemporary moment. It thus does not aim to be historically comprehensive; instead our reading will be focused on certain questions and themes, including smart war; total war; just war; military intervention; models of the enemy; trauma; and the reformulation of human rights in the context of the "war on terror." Print narratives will include Pat Barker, Regeneration (and short selections of WWI poetry by Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen); Joe Sacco, Safe Area Goražde: The War in Eastern Bosnia, 1992-1995; Tim O'Brien, The Things They Carried; Etel Adnan, Sitt Marie Rose; and others. Theory and criticism will include Ernst Friedrich, Jordan Crandall, Paul Virilio, James Der Derian, Susan Sontag, Regarding the Pain of Others, and Manuel De Landa, War in the Age of Intelligent Machines. Films will include Apocalypse Now and West Beirut. Games and other media projects will include September 12; Antiwargame; America's Army; Full Spectrum Warrior; and Baghdad <> San Francisco. (Media projects such as The Great Game will illuminate the shift from representation to information visualization.) We will also consider the rhetoric and function of war reporting and discuss excerpts from films such as The Mills of the Gods, War Feels Like War, Gunner Palace and Jarhead.
          There will be two papers and a comprehensive final exam. This course will count toward the undergraduate specialization in Literature & Culture of Information but is designed for a general audience; LCI students will compose a web project to substitute for one of the papers. All students should be prepared to attend separate film screenings or to make alternate arrangements to see the films we will discuss in the course (DVDs and videos will be on reserve in Kerr Hall).

  • English 146: Literature of Technology: Electronic Literature (instructor: Rita Raley).

  • English 147SS: Media History and Theory: From Scroll to Screen (instructor: Carol Pasternack).
                This course will explore the differences in telling a tale orally, in writing, in print, and on the computer screen. We will begin with oral composition and performance, working with Leslie Marmon Silko's Storyteller, which represents the interactions between oral tradition and print, and Euro and Native American ethnicities. We then hurl ourselves back in time to the 6th century BCE, the era in which the Jews made the transition from being a people of a geographical location and oral culture to being a people in exile and a people of the book. We will look both at the special nature of a holy book and the physical aspects and implications of its material shape as scroll and have the chance to see the Torah up close with Rabbi Steve Cohen. Next we will zero in on medieval manuscript culture, looking at the materials themselves (vellum and pigments) and the uses of the page with gorgeous decorations, glosses and text, courtesy of special presentations by curators at the Getty. We'll approach this medium first through Psalms and Books of Hours and then through Christine de Pizan's The Book of the City of Ladies. Christine is remarkable in being one of the first writers to have a sense of herself as an "author," as well as being a force in the production of texts that support rather than denigrate women. Then we move on to the era of print and specifically the more wide-spread circulation of texts in newspapers and pamphlets and turn to the American colonies and Benjamin Franklin, early printer, newspaper publisher, and promoter of public libraries. The class will conclude with hypertext and interactive fiction, looking at how this medium changes the roles of reader and author as it changes the nature of the text itself, and once again the complex contributions of economics to these changes. The class will include considerable use of the Web as a topic of analysis, a means of access to manuscripts and early print texts, and as a medium for producing the students' own work. Assignments will involve "doing" as well as analyzing.

  • English 149: Media History of the American Revolution (instructor: William Warner).
          [Description TBA]

  • English 197: Senior Seminar, Dystopian Fictions (instructor: Rita Raley).
2006-2007
Fall
  • English 10LC: Introduction to Literary Study--Literation: Lists in Literature (instructor: Jeremy Douglass).
          How does the literary technique of listing resist (and demand) a story? Grounding our understanding of the list in ancient literary forms (commandments, litanies, miscellanies, commonplace books), we will focus on a survey of lists in contemporary fiction (in novels and antinovels, language poems, comic books, indexes, ephemera, and almanacs and biographies both fictional and real). Our eventual consideration will be lists as they occur in new media (hypertext fiction, interactive fiction, video games) and the aesthetics of databases, procedural logic, and computation.

  • English 10LC: Introduction to Literary Study--Artists, Creation, Technology, and Structure (instructor: Maggie Sloan).
          This course offers an introduction to literature with an emphasis in exploring the intersection between traditional forms of literature and newer technologies. We will read across three primary genres--poetry, drama, and prose--and work closely with the texts to develop critical reading and writing skills. We will pay particular attention to the importance of media and to the consideration of digital approaches to literature. Texts include: William Blake's Songs of Innocence and of Experience, Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, Shelley Jackson's Patchwork Girl, Robert Louis Stevenson's The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, and Jorge Luis Borge's "The Garden of Forking Paths."

  • English 147VP: The Voice and the Page (instructor: Carol Pasternack).
          What does it mean to tell a story? What does it mean to write a story? What does it mean to listen to the story or to read it? The meanings of stories have a direct relationship to their material realities and the parts they play in social situations. In this class, we will examine medieval texts with the goal of figuring out how they were meaningful at the time of their production and/or performances. We will look at edited texts and also at manuscript facsimiles (digital and print) and a few actual medieval manuscripts in order to see the traces of oral composition and performance and see how the texts were written and read. We will consider, “What do these early texts tell us about the varieties of performances and texts that we might call ‘literature’ and the varieties that we might call ‘information’?” And we will consider the impacts of distinctive information technologies on ‘literature’ and ‘information.’ Webpage authoring will be part of the work.

Winter
  • English 10LC: Introduction to Literary Study--Artistry and Media (instructor: Kris McAbee).
          This course addresses such issues as the role of the artist in reception and circulation, the cultural stakes of the artist figure, and notions of "oustider" or "fringe" artists. We will analyze texts from a wide range of media, genres, and historical periods, including but not limited to selections of early modern and Modernist poetry, Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, Gloria Naylor's Mama Day, George Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion, selections from Ovid's Metamorphoses, and selections from the UCSB Early Modern Center's Pepys Ballad Archive, among other "new media."

  • English 10LC: Introduction to Literary Study--Quotidian Narratives (instructor: Jeff Beckstrand).
          Narratives live in strange and often boring places. In addition to general introduction to literary form, genre and method, this course seeks to examine the lives of ledgers, footnotes, indices, chess, weather, playing cards, lunchtimes, bicycles, magic, buttons, cookies, air conditioners, &tc. This course will focus on narratives of "mundanity" during the technological culture of the A-bomb and Apollo era, with attendant attention to its origins and future. Featuring novels, poems, plays, films, art, theory and music by Barthes, Queneau, O'Hara, Newman, Pollock, Beckett, Johnson, Coover, Nabokov, Cage, Duchamp, and Welles.

  • English 122 NW: Narratives of War (instructor: Rita Raley) (lecture course).
          This course examines twentieth-century narratives of war from the perspective of our contemporary moment. It thus does not aim to be historically comprehensive; instead our reading will be focused on certain questions and themes, including smart war; total war; just war; military intervention; models of the enemy; trauma; and the reformulation of human rights in the context of the “war on terror.” Print narratives will include Pat Barker, Regeneration (and short selections of WWI poetry by Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen); Joe Sacco, Safe Area Goražde: The War in Eastern Bosnia, 1992-1995; Tim O’Brien, The Things They Carried; Etel Adnan, Sitt Marie Rose; and others. Theory and criticism will include Ernst Friedrich, Jordan Crandall, Paul Virilio, James Der Derian, Susan Sontag, Regarding the Pain of Others, and Manuel De Landa, War in the Age of Intelligent Machines. Films will include Apocalypse Now and West Beirut. Games and other media projects will include September 12; Antiwargame; America's Army; Full Spectrum Warrior; and Baghdad <> San Francisco. (Media projects such as The Great Game will illuminate the shift from representation to information visualization.) We will also consider the rhetoric and function of war reporting and discuss excerpts from films such as The Mills of the Gods, War Feels Like War, Gunner Palace and Jarhead.
          There will be two papers and a comprehensive final exam. This course will count toward the undergraduate specialization in Literature & Culture of Information but is designed for a general audience; LCI students will compose a web project to substitute for one of the papers. All students should be prepared to attend separate film screenings or to make alternate arrangements to see the films we will discuss in the course (DVDs and videos will be on reserve in Kerr Hall).
  • English 133 GC: Global California (instructor: Chris Newfield).
          This course is an introduction to California literature and culture after 1940. It addresses questions such as: What was the "California Dream"? What is happening to the California Dream today? How has California culture and society changed since World War II? Is California a philosophy or just another state in the union? What does "globalization" mean and how is it changing California culture and society? Is California still a leading-edge place, the place where "the future happens first"? What will happen to 21st Century California? In order to answer these questions, we will consider some major California themes: crime, money, moguls, tech booms, immigration, fame, sex, silicon, alienation, racism, multiculturalism, movies, and self-actualization.
Spring
  • English 10LC: Introduction to Literary Study--Global Mi-/Immi-gration (instructor: Yanoula Athanassakis).
          This course is designed to provide students with an introduction to a variety of literary genres, including poetry, short stories, drama, and prose. In doing so we’ll pay particular attention to the way that writers describe immigration (particularly to the United States), cultural flows and exchanges, and hybrid/split identity formations via literary and visual representation. Staying primarily within the borders of the 20th and 21st centuries, we’ll explore how the global immigrant experience is both explicitly and implicitly represented in literature, popular culture, and new media. We’ll find and prod the different types of borders that are crossed when a work goes from print to video to film to hypertext, and how the inherent "crossings" within a text's words are challenged and/or reinforced by changes in medium. Our reading will include excerpts from works by Jhumpa Lahiri, Elizabeth Bishop, Jeffrey Eugenides, Edwidge Danticat, Jean Rhys, Paul Gilroy, and Judith Butler (to name a few). We’ll also be viewing films and working with the web.

  • English 10LC: Introduction to Literary Study--Body, Text, Technology (instructor: Robin Chin).
          The primary goal of this course as an “English 10” is to introduce students to the basic skills of literary analysis through the examination a wide variety of prose and poetic forms. In addition, as an LCI affiliated course, students will be required to complete a wide variety of writing assignments that recognize and interact with the “culture of information,” from weekly online reading reflections to a final web page project of significant analytical depth. The secondary goal of this course is to engage students in a particular discussion about the relationship between two concepts -- the text and the body -- and how this fascinating relationship is influenced by recent revolutions in “modern” technology. Beginning with the Industrial Age and Victorian literature and continuing through the Information age and literary works of the late 20th century, this course will pay special attention to the rise of “new media” in literary studies. Readings may include: Mary Shelley’s Gothic novel Frankenstein; the short stories of Edgar Allan Poe; the short stories of Franz Kafka; the poetry of Charles Baudelaire; war poems from various World War I authors; the sci-fi film Forbidden Planet (1956); William Gibson’s cyberpunk novel Neuromancer; and N. Katherine Hayles’ Writing Machines. This course will include a reader. No previous web experience is required to enroll.

  • English 25: Introduction to Literature and the Culture of Information (instructor: Alan Liu) (lecture course).
          This course studies contemporary information culture from the viewpoint of the humanities and arts. What is information, and why is it so important that it not only affects our economy, politics, and society but also our culture (the culture of "cool," it has been called) and our arts (the "new media" literatures, arts, music, and games). The course brings writings about information society together with works of new-media literature and art to study the following aspects of information: information as media, communication, and "new media"; information as work and power; and information as identity (see the Schedule page for details). Required readings are in print (e.g., Thomas Pynchon's The Crying of Lot 49, William Gibson's novel, Neuromancer), on the Web, and on CD-ROM (M. D. Coverley's hypertext novel, Califia). Assignments include some Web-authoring at the beginner's level. No pre-existing technical skills are needed, but the ability to access the Web is necessary to do the online readings.

  • English 146 CC: The Culture of the Copy (instructor: Rita Raley).
          This course interprets “copy” in the broadest possible terms. Themes and issues we will consider include cloning, ALife, transgenics, cybernetics, simulation, masquerade, counterfeit, avatars, drag, la perruque, doppelgängers, déjà vu, the uncanny, viruses, phishing, virtual pets, recycled culture (plagiarism, appropriation), creative cloning, and copybots. Fiction will include Ishiguro, Churchill, and Palahniuk (texts below), Edgar Allan Poe, and others. Theory and criticism will include Walter Benjamin, Michel de Certeau, Sigmund Freud, Judith Butler, Baudrillard, and others. Art projects by Eduardo Kac, Tom Ray, The Yes Men, and others; discussion of The Sims and "I Want a Famous Face" and ideally one virtual class session in Second Life. Films will possibly include Blade Runner, The Boys from Brazil, Vertigo, or Dead Ringers.

  • English 194: Research Seminar in Literature and Culture of Information (instructor: Alan Liu).
          This is an undergraduate research workshop or practicum (limited to 15 students) in which participants break into teams to pursue research related to literature and the culture of information. (The course may be counted for the English Dept's specialization in Literature and the Culture of Information.) The theme of this instance of the course is the relation between literary interpretation and other paradigms of knowledge, especially those that the new digital media and technologies are bringing into conjunction with the humanities. Students will create projects that experiment with literary interpretation by transforming it into such things as a "game," "simulation," "model," "experiment," "hypertext," "blog," "map," etc. (For example, students might build a computer simulation using the NetLogo program, play a "game" of literary interpretation like Jerome McGann's and Johanna Drucker's Ivanhoe Game, create a statistical representation or visualization of a text, create a GIS satellite-image-based map related to literature, create a blog in which the "contributors" are the characters in a novel, etc.). Student research will be published on a collective, online research Web site produced through a "wiki"publishing and editing environment that enacts the process of creative collaboration. Readings will include Franco Moretti's short book, Graphs, Maps,Trees: Abstract Models for a Literary History, parts of Willard McCarty's Humanities Computing, plus other print and online readings designed to stimulate though about the issues.
         Prerequisites: a prior course in the English 146AA-ZZ, 147AA-Zz, or 148AA-ZZ series. (If you have taken other lower-division courses in the Literature and Culture of Information specialization, including English 10LCI and English 25, and would like to use those as your prerequisite, please consult the instructor. Students who have taken a previous instance of English 194 can take this new instance of the course as an independent study.)

2005-2006
Fall
  • English 10 LC--Introduction to Literary Study (instructor: Elizabeth Freudenthal).
          In this version of English 10, students will practice basic methods of literary analysis on a broad range of poetic and prose forms, all concerned with the intersections of literature and digital technologies. We will explore the ways in which the economic, political, military and technical aspects of information and media technologies affect literature and culture. Special units will include information technology and the body; multinational capitalism and business culture; and information technology and war. Required texts include William Gibson's Pattern Recognition, Chris Ware's Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth, a course reader and various online readings. Students will be required to construct a basic Web page; no prior Web experience is necessary. This class is being facilitated with Moodle.


  • English 10 LC--Introduction to Literary Study (instructor: Jennifer Stoy).


  • English 122NW: Narratives of War (instructor: Rita Raley) (lecture course; requirements and section information).
          This course examines twentieth-century narratives of war from the perspective of our contemporary moment. It thus does not aim to be historically comprehensive; instead our reading will be focused on certain questions and themes, including smart war; just war; military intervention; models of the enemy; trauma; and the reformulation of human rights in the context of the “war on terror.” Print narratives will include Pat Barker, Regeneration (and short selections of WWI poetry by Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen); Joe Sacco, Safe Area Goražde: The War in Eastern Bosnia, 1992-1995; Tim O’Brien, If I Die in a Combat Zone; Etel Adnan, Sitt Marie Rose; and others. Theory and criticism will include Sigmund Freud, Karl Von Clausewitz, Hannah Arendt, Slavoj Žižek, Paul Virilio, Susan Sontag, James Der Derian, and Manuel De Landa, War in the Age of Intelligent Machines. Films will likely include Apocalypse Now; The Deer Hunter; and West Beirut. Games and other media projects will include September 12; Antiwargame; America's Army; 79 Days; Secret Bases, Secret Wars; and Baghdad <> San Francisco. (Media projects such as The Great Game will illuminate the shift from representation to information visualization.) We will also consider the rhetoric and function of war reporting by discussing excerpts from Chris Hedges, War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning; and the documentary film War Feels Like War.

  • English 197: Reading Code (instructor: Rita Raley).
          Our object in this seminar will be to consider digital texts (artistic and literary) that thematize the relations between language and code. The critical discourse on new media writing (in different accounts “cybertext” and “electronic literature”) asserts an intricate and necessary connection between the text and the medium. We are no longer seeking to identify a radical difference between the computer as medium and earlier writing machines like the typewriter, so much as we seek to develop analytic and semiotic paradigms particular to the technological substrate of the text. One of the central concerns of the digital humanities, then, is the interrelation, exchange, and encounter between text and code – broadly, the tower of programming languages (from machine language up to fourth-generation programming languages) that produces the textual interface. Issues and genres that we will study throughout include electronic English, codework, operational text, machine translation, and the Open Source movement. We will also discuss codeworkers and the virtual class in relation to the "California ideology" of entrepreneurial innovation and individual freedom. Art, experimental writing, and poetry by John Cayley, mez, Talan Memmott, Genco Gulan, Komninos Zervos, Noah Wardrip-Fruin, Ted Warnell, Giselle Beiguelman, Jodi, and others. Theory and criticism will include Espen Aarseth, N. Katherine Hayles, Lev Manovich, Florian Cramer, Alexander Galloway, Lawrence Lessig and others. New Media exhibitions include "CODeDOC" (Whitney); "I Love You" (digitalcraft.org); and Code (year01.com).
Winter
  • English 10 LC: Short Forms and Media (instructor: James Hodge).
          Short Forms and Media: This course serves as an introduction to the principles of literary analysis, with particular attention to the importance of medium. To gain a broad sense of the ways mediation functions in literature and culture we will take "short forms" as our topic: lyric poetry, short stories, one-act plays, short films, music videos, wall labels, hypertext poems, Quicktime movies, epigrams, epitaphs, miniatures, captions, blurbs, etc. More thematically, we will explore issues of memory and the relation between words and images. Assignments will include analytical essays, visits to the University Art Museum, English Department Transcriptions Studio, library Special Collections, and a final media project of the student's design.

  • English 10 LC: Textual Genealogies (instructor: Kim Knight)
          In this version of English 10, we will use the basic principles of literary analysis to explore the intersections and disjunctions between literature and technology. We will engage with a variety of content, from gothic fiction to contemporary prose and poetry, to visual texts such as graphic novels, films, or video games. Our movement through the course will progress genre-by-genre and a primary aspect of our work will be to tease out the threads that unite the wide range of texts under consideration. We will also be reading a selection of critical works and learning some rudimentary web design skills in order to complete a web-based project. In addition, the class will include instruction in research and writing in print and digital environments. Recommended for students interested in doing a future Literature and Culture of Information specialization. English 10 is required for all English majors and recommended for English minors.

  • English 146EL: Electronic Literature (instructor: Rita Raley).
          This course will address literature for which the computer is both the composition and the delivery medium. We will consider the differences a medium makes to a text: what difference does the machine and machinic processing make? What new formal and generic properties can we see within digital texts? On what basis - computational, formal, institutional, aesthetic, practical, or otherwise - may we group together digital texts into a literary field? After some consideration of precursors to hypertext and the first generation of hypertext authors and critics, we will continue to map out a brief history of the field of electronic literature (or, new media writing), and we will end by studying some of the most technically and intellectually compelling works on the web. Texts and genres that we will study throughout include print hypertexts and artists’s books, combinatorial writing, cybertext, interactive fiction and text adventure games, visual poetry, digital poetics, codework, and the art of computation. Reading will include Espen Aarseth, N. Katherine Hayles, Lev Manovich, John Cayley, mez, Talan Memmott, Young-hae Chang Industries, Komninos Zervos, J. Yellowlees Douglas, Jorge Luis Borges, Claire Dinsmore, Noah Wardrip-Fruin, Florian Cramer, Ted Warnell, Dan Waber, Jason Nelson, Giselle Beiguelman and others

  • English 197: Senior Seminar, Poetry Lab (instructor: Yunte Huang).
          A study of poetry in a multimedia lab environment, investigating the ways in which poetry can be created (oral, literate, print, and digital) and the ways in which it can be read (improvised, memorized, recited, handwritten, printed, typewritten, recorded, digitized, text-messaged, read aloud, and read silently).

  • English 197: Senior Seminar, The Material Lyric (instructor: Carol Pasternack).
          A study of short poems from Anglo-Saxon England to the 21st century for their materiality of performance and publication as well as their ability to speak across time and beyond their original material forms and textual conventions. Texts will include lyrics from the Old English Exeter Book ("Wanderer," "Seafarer," "Wife's Lament," riddles); Harley lyrics; sonnets; Blake's Songs of Innocence and Experience; hypertext lyrics.
Spring
  • English 10 LC: Reading the Pictorial in Image and Text (instructor: Gerald Egan).
          Our emphasis will be on the intense close reading, discussion, and written analysis of selected and limited literary texts (poetry, drama, and prose) from the eighteenth century to the present. While our primary emphasis will be with the “words on the page,” we will specifically focus on the intersection of the written word and the image that occurs within and without the book and the new media object. We will interrogate the ways in which poems replicate the pictorial, the ways in which paintings and prints constitute readable “texts,” and the ways in which the two media have interacted from the invention of print to the spread of the digital computer. With its concentration on close reading, this course teaches students to develop an interpretation of the literary text or new media object, to use evidence from the text to support their interpretations, and to shape essays appropriate to upper-division literature classes. The course also teaches students to shape critical and literary analysis as new media presentations, primarily Web pages in which it will be possible to explore the intersection of the word and the image more dynamically than in print. As an ongoing part of the course, we will study the fundamental vocabulary of literary analysis, the basics of MLA style for print, and the evolving conventions of Web publication. Required for all English majors and recommended for English minors. English 10LC satisfies course requirements for the English Department’s Literature and Culture of Information specialization.

  • English 10 LC: The Lives of Media: Image, Text, Animation (instructor: James Hodge).
          This course serves as an introduction to the principles of literary analysis, with particular attention to concepts of media. We will scrutinize the importance of mediation in literary and other cultural forms by surveying the ways in which aesthetic texts and objects come to life. Books write themselves, statues walk, images look back, computers contract viruses. What do we make of such animating encounters? More generally, how do such encounters affect our sense of the real or our sense of life itself? We will likely encounter the following authors, artists and directors: David Cronenberg, Mary Shelley, Shelley Jackson, Chris Ware, Scott McCloud, John Keats, David Ives, Edgar Allen Poe, Jan Svankmajer, Emily Dickinson, Michel Gondry, Virgil Widrich, Jorge Luis Borges, and Laurie Anderson. Assignments include weekly responses, 2 papers, and a final exam. Texts Include: Frankenstein, Patchwork Girl, Quimby the Mouse, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Chris Ware.

  • English 147SS: Media History and Theory: From Scroll to Screen (instructor: Carol Pasternack).
          This course will explore the differences in telling a tale orally, in writing, in print, and on the computer screen. We will begin with oral composition and performance, working with Leslie Marmon Silko's Storyteller, which represents the interactions between oral tradition and print, and Euro and Native American ethnicities. We then hurl ourselves back in time to the 6th century BCE, the era in which the Jews made the transition from being a people of a geographical location and oral culture to being a people in exile and a people of the book. We will look both at the special nature of a holy book and the physical aspects and implications of its material shape as scroll and have the chance to see the Torah up close with Rabbi Steve Cohen. Next we will zero in on medieval manuscript culture, looking at the materials themselves—vellum and pigments—and the uses of the page with gorgeous decorations, glosses and text, courtesy of special presentations by curators at the Getty. We'll approach this medium first through Psalms and Books of Hours and then through Christine de Pizan's The Book of the City of Ladies. Christine is remarkable in being one of the first writers to have a sense of herself as an “author,” as well as being a force in the production of texts that support rather than denigrate women. Then we move on to the era of print and specifically the more wide-spread circulation of texts in newspapers and pamphlets and turn to the American colonies and Benjamin Franklin, early printer, newspaper publisher, and promoter of public libraries. The class will conclude with hypertext and interactive fiction, looking at how this medium changes the roles of reader and author as it changes the nature of the text itself, and once again the complex contributions of economics to these changes. The class will include considerable use of the Web as a topic of analysis, a means of access to manuscripts and early print texts, and as a medium for producing the students' own work. Assignments will involve “doing” as well as analyzing.

  • English 194: New Modes of Authorship: Creativity and Collaboration, 1800-2000 (instructor: Alan Liu).
          This is the first instance of the new course for the LCI specialization approved two years ago titled "Research Seminar in Literature and Culture of Information." It is a small seminar that, like English 197, is limited to 15 students. The course functions as a research workshop or practicum in which students break into teams and pursue research related both to literature and the culture of information. (The course may be counted for the English Department's Literature and Culture of Information specialization.) The final "product" of the course will be a collective, online research Web site. This instance of the course will use an online "Wiki" publishing and editing environment to pursue research into two, interwoven paradigms of intellectual production with long histories and much contemporary value: creativity and collaboration. The Wiki publishing environment will itself be one of the topics of the course. Readings will include primary and secondary or theoretical texts spanning from the eras of Romanticism to recent information-technology and business writings about "authorship," "creativity," "collaboration," "innovation," "peer-to-peer," "intellectual property," "open source," "blogs," etc. Prerequisites: a prior course in the English 146AA-ZZ, 147AA-Zz, or 148AA-ZZ series. (If you have taken other lower-division courses in the Literature and Culture of Information specialization, including English 10LCI and English 25, and would like to use those as your prerequisite, please consult the instructor.)

Summer (A)

  • English 192: Science Fiction, Cyberpunk (instructor: Kim Knight).
          In the age of networked culture and spectacular media, the line between science fiction and "real life" becomes increasingly difficult to define. In this version of English 192 we will explore the development of cyberpunk, a genre of science fiction that typically features a hacker-figure in the context of cyberspace and is typically set against larger institutions. Born of the 1980's, this particular strand of science fiction has anticipated the future in uncanny ways. Our goal will be to examine the literature and films of this genre to determine whether, in fact, "the future is now." We will begin with Frankenstein, the earliest example of science fiction and then trace the development of the genre through cyberpunk-precursors such as Philip K. Dick and James Tiptree Jr. We will then work extensively with cyberpunk texts and film, including its many subgenres, to address questions of spirituality, the un/human, and the role of the individual in society. Finally, we will end the course with a look at "real life" iterations of cyberpunk (hypertext literature, hacker art, etc) in order to assess the relevance of this genre to contemporary information culture.



Sampler of Past Courses
(see Transcriptions curriculum page for full archive)
2004-2005
2003-2004
2002-2003
2001-2002
2000-2001
1999-2000



Special Activities & Events

One of the most innovative aspects of the LCI Specialization is its implementation of the English Department's mandate that majors electing a specialization be provided with an outside-the-classroom, network- and community-building, "value-added" experience.

Film.Literature.Software Series

In 2005, the LCI Specialization began a quarterly discussion series entitled "Film.Literature.Software." Events in the series bring together undergraduate students, graduate students, and faculty to discuss films, fiction, poetry, games, software, and other works related to new media and new technologies.


Undergraduate Research Teams

In 2001-2002, the LCI Specialization organized two experimental undergraduate research teams (one in winter, another in spring) to give students exposure to research work in the humanities in collaboration with graduate students and faculty. Students on the teams worked as paid research assistants under the supervision of a teaching assistant and the Transcriptions faculty. A similar research team will be organized in 2003-2004.

The purpose of the research teams is to:

  • Conduct research on topics related to information culture (its media, society, politics, economics, aesthetics, etc.). Particular topics are determined by the team. Examples might include: e-books, new media art, writers & digital media, information tech & globalism, gaming culture, games and women, race & the Internet, hackers & the university, "hacktivist" politics, use of the Internet by non-governmental organizations, age & the Internet, the future of the library, etc.

  • Conduct interviews and field research with experts or spokespersons.

  • Produce a student-managed "magazine" for the Literature & Culture of Information Web site that holds the results of research: feature articles, interviews, overviews of research, bibliographies, breaking news, etc. (See the first issues of the LCI Magazine produced by the 2002-2003 research teams.)

Field Trips

Field Trip to Panasonic Speech Technology Laboratory
Alan Liu and students in the LCI specialization and Transcriptions Project watch a demo at the Panasonic Speech Technology Laboratory
(photo courtesy of Yi Zhao, PSTL)

Colloquia and Guest Speakers

  • Oct. 30, 2002: David Carson, Graphic Designer, David Carson Design, Inc., "Discussion and Interview with David Carson"
  • Oct 17, 2002: Sue Thomas, Artistic Director of trAce Online Writing Centre; Principal Lecturer, Dept. of English & Media Studies, Nottingham Trent U., UK, "Imagination and Reality: Print-Based Writers Working on the Web"
  • June 12, 2002: Presentations by LCI Research Teams. End-of-the-year presentations by the LCI's undergraduate research teams to show the results of their work.
  • May 2, 2002: Victoria Vesna, special guest visitor in Alan Liu's seminar on "Literature and Graphic Design, 1900-2000." Vesna is a digital and network artist, professor, and chair of the Department of Design/Media Arts at the UCLA School of the Arts. Her major recent works have included digital projects and installations titled notime: Building a Community of People with No Time and Bodies,INC.
  • April 22, 2002: Lev Manovich, guest speaker in a colloquium organized by Transcriptions and The Digital Cultures Project. Manovich, whose book The Language of New Media is assigned reading in several LCI courses, is a well-known theorist and practitioner of digital media. He is in residence at UCSB during spring quarter 2002 as a fellow of the Digital Cultures Project.
  • Oct. 31, 2001: Online chat in Rita Raley's English 165LT, "Hypertext Fiction and Digital Poetries" course with hypertext theorist, critic, and writer Jeff Parker.

 




 
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