October 11, 2003

ENGL 467: Computer and Text (Kirschenbaum, Spring 2004)

This course will explore what one recent critic has called "cybertexts": works of literature, primarily but not exclusively digital, that are meant to be played, navigated, and manipulated in addition to "read" in the conventional sense. Choose Your Own Adventure books are examples of printed cybertexts with which you might be familiar, though as we will see they only scratch the surface--quite unimaginatively--of what is possible within the form. Specific topics will include: interactive fiction; chatterbots and intelligent agents; MUDs and MOOs; writing and/as code; hypertext, both stand-alone formats and networked on the World Wide Web; literary games and simulations; and emergent literature or "smart" texts. We will read/play/explore works from all of these genres and formats, and our discussions will focus on both identifying the cybertextual traits they have in common as well as discriminating each form's unique achievements and significance. These discussions will be set within a broader consideration of textuality, including the question of what a text actually is--an old question which digital technologies now ask us to ask anew. You will leave the course with a sense of the literary and digital tradition of cybertext, hands-on experience of some of the most innovative literature being produced today, and (hopefully) some fundamentally new ways of thinking about texts and textuality.

Requirements: class participation, weekly responses, short papers, one longer paper or digital project, mid-term and final exams.

A note on expectations: there are no technical pre-requisites for this course. You do not have to be--nor should you expect to become!--a computer professional. Students seeking only practical instruction in software, programming, or Web design would be best advised to look elsewhere. We will, however, be using a computer-equipped classroom for weekly exercises and experiments to build on our theoretical understandings, and try our hands at producing some cybertexts ourselves.

Posted by mgk at October 11, 2003 07:35 PM
Comments