In this
study, I have chosen "hypertext" as the central concept. If
we define hypertext as interconnected bits of language (I am
stretching Ted Nelson's original definition quite a lot, but
still maintaining its spirit, I believe) we can understand
why Nelson sees hypertext "as the most general form of
writing". There is no inherent connotation to digital in
hypertext (the first hypertext system was based on
microfilms), but it is the computerized, digital framework -
allowing the easy manipulation of both texts and their
connections - which gives the most out of it. In addition to
the "simple" hypertexts, there is a whole range of digital
texts much more complex and more "clever", which cannot be
reduced to hypertext, even though they too are based on
hypertextuality. Such digital texts as MUDs (Multi User
Domains - text based virtual realities) are clearly
hypertextual - there are pieces of text describing different
environments usually called "rooms" and the user may wander
from room to room as in any hypertext. At the same time,
however, there are several other functions available for the
user, she may talk with other users, write her own rooms,
program objects performing special tasks, or, solve problems
and collect game points.
Hypertextuality and
hypertext theory do not help us much (if at all) in
understanding this kind of textual functionality. For that
we need cybertext theory. Cybertextuality is - as
Espen Aarseth has defined it - a perspective on all
texts, a perspective which takes into account and
foregrounds the functionality of all texts. From the
cybertextual point of view all texts are machines which
perform certain functions and which have to be used in a
certain way. Also, the reader may be required to perform
some functions in order to be able to read the texts, or,
she may be allowed to act as an active participant inside
the textual world.
Cybertextuality, then, is
not only about digital texts, but because digital form
allows much more freedom to textual functionality, there is
much more need for cybertext theory in the field of digital
texts than in print text. (1)
So, keeping in mind cybertextuality is a perspective on all
texts, we can use the term cybertext in a more limited sense
to refer to functional digital texts - this means that all
digital texts are not necessary cybertexts (plain text files
like in the Project Gutenberg archives, or, e-texts
in pdf format are no more functional than average print
texts).
Now we can better define the
scope of this study. The theoretical framework is a
combination of cybertext theory and more traditional theory
of literature. The focus is on hypertext fiction, even
though several other text types - digital and non-digital,
literary and non literary, fiction and poetry - are also
discussed. To deepen the understanding of hypertext fiction
and its reading, quite of lot of attention is paid to the
evolutionary line of print fiction which seems to be a major
influence in the background. That aspect explains the first
part of the subtitle, "From text to hypertext", with an
emphasis on the transitory phase we are witnessing. On the
other hand, the approach is open to the latent aspects of
the hypertexts discussed, which already refer to the wider
cybertextual properties - because of that the "and Beyond".
In the main title, "Digital Literature", literature is used
in a narrow ("literary") sense. The method is inductive in
that through scrutinizing individual, concrete exmples, a
more general understanding of the field is sought after.
Through not trying to include all the possible digital text
types in this study I aim to be more analytic than
descriptive.
This work should be seen as
a collection of independent papers - some of them are
previously published, some are still waiting for a proper
forum. Most of them have started as seminar papers. I have
used the opportunity to make some corrections and changes to
the articles previously published (mainly to reduce
redundancy, or, to add materials cut out from the
publications) - thus, the chapters of this study are not
identical with published versions.
In the first chapter
of this study I will give a description of the various
traditions behind digital literature, of characteristic
properties of digital literature, and, the basics of
cybertext theory. I consider various hypertext studies
belonging as a part to the broader category of cybertext
theory.
The second chapter,
"Hyperhistory, Cybertheory: From Memex to ergodic
literature", is an overview of cybertext theory, circling
around Aarseth's theory of cybertext and ergodic literature.
Various other approaches are discussed, and integrated to
the theoretical framework. For understanding cybertext
theory, a historical glance to the development of hypertext
systems (and ideologies behind them) is necessary. The
integration of hyper- and cybertheories is still very much
in progress - hopefully this chapter contributes to that
integration.
In the third chapter
"Replacement and Displacement. At the limits of print
fiction", several novels and stories are scrutinized from
the cybertextual perspective. The aim of the chapter is to
show the various ways in which print fiction has anticipated
hypertextual practices.
The fourth chapter,
"Ontolepsis: from violation to central device" focusses on
the narrative device which I have dubbed ontolepsis.
Ontolepsis covers different kinds of "leaks" between
separate ontological levels (inside fictional universe).
Metalepsis, the crossing of levels of embedded
narration, is one type of ontolepses, and certainly so far
the most studied one. There is a rather lengthy discussion
of fictional ontology, and its relation to narrative levels,
because these are essential topics in understanding the
phenomenon of ontolepsis in all its forms. A science fiction
novel, Philip K. Dick's Ubik, is used as an example,
because its multilayered ontology serves perfectly in
illustrating the multifarious nature of ontolepsis. In
fiction, ontolepses have been seen as violations of certain
conventions - the latter part of the chapter discusses how
in hypertext fiction ontolepsis has become a central
narrative device.
In the fifth chapter,
"Visual structuring of hypertext narratives", three
hypertexts, Michael Joyce's Afternoon, Stuart
Moulthrop's Victory Garden, and Shelley Jackson's
Patchwork Girl, are analyzed stressing their
navigation interfaces and use of "spatial signification".
Narratological questions are also foregrounded.
Chapters six and
seven, "Reading Victory Garden - Competing
Interpretations and Loose Ends" and "In Search of Califia"
form a pair. They are rather lengthy analyses, or,
interpretations, of Stuart Moulthrop's Victory
Garden, and M. D. Coverley's Califia. In the end
of Califia chapter, the question of interpreting
hypertexts is discussed. Two forms of interpretative
practice, hermeneutics and poetics, seem to have their own
roles in regard to hypertexts.
The next chapter,
"Negotiating new reading conventions" focusses on reading.
In this chapter I'll look at how traditional reading
conventions, on the one hand, still inform hypertext
reading, and on the other hand, how hypertexts themselves
teach new reading habits, and how new reading formations are
negotiated.
The final chapter,
"Hypertext Fiction in the Twilight Zone" is a kind of
summary. It suggest that fiction based on "pure" hypertext
may be closing its end, and at the same time, looks at the
cybertextual means which have appeared to fertilize the
field anew. In the horizon there are computer games, virtual
realities and other massively programmed forms towering, but
also a possibility for a new literature.
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(1)
Which is not to say that there were no use for cybertext
theory in the field of print texts - first, there is an
amount of experimental or avant garde print texts which take
full advantage of functionality potential print book offers;
and secondly, there is still much to do to understand the
way how literature (even in the most traditional form) works
as a technology (see Sukenick (1972) "The New
Tradition", in: In Form: Digressions on the Act of
Fiction. Carbondale and Edwardsville: Southern Illinois
University Press) - cybertext theory should prove quite
fruitful in that field of study.