In Reading Writing Interfaces, Lori Emerson examines howinterfaces-from today's multitouch devices to yesterday's desktops, fromtypewriters to Emily Dickinson's self-bound fascicle volumes-mediate betweenwriter and text as well as between writer and reader. Following the threads ofexperimental writing from the present into the past, she shows how writers havelong tested and transgressed technological boundaries.
Table of Contents:
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Opening Closings
1. Indistinguishable from Magic: Invisible Interfaces and Digital Literature as Demystifier2. From the Philosophy of the Open to the Ideology of the User-Friendly3. Typewriter Concrete Poetry as Activist Media Poetics4. The Fascicle as Process and Product
Postscript: The Googlization of LiteratureNotesIndex
About the Author :
Lori Emerson is assistant professor of English, as well as the founder and director of the Media Archaeology Lab at the University of Colorado at Boulder.
Review :
"This is the first book to bridge the fields of media archaeology and literary studies, specifically poetry and poetics. It offers new readings-and sometimes a first reading-of important texts, it performs historical spadework that adds to the existing narratives of how the personal computer has evolved, and it contributes to current critical conversations by making the category of interface central to its explorations of textual materiality." -Matthew G. Kirschenbaum, author of Mechanisms: New Media and the Forensic Imagination "Emerson’s book is not only fascinating because of the richness of its close-readings or the thought-provoking frictions that it creates between historically, technologically, culturally, ideologically very diverse authors and practices. Its most appealing aspect is the political stance it takes towards its material."-Image (&) Narrative
"Reading Writing Interfaces draws our attention back to the materiality of digital languages, reveals the underlying processes of writing, and makes visible the interfaces through which we read/write our world."-The Literary Platform
"A useful contribution to the understanding of the digital."-CHOICE
"With cogent analyses of both analogue and digital literature, Emerson renders legible the historical and contemporary instantiations of the interface that have been masked from the user by the sleek celebratory language of marketing."-Jacket2
"This works succeeds in accomplishing the rare goal of being pioneering and engaging."-International Journal of Communication