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The World Wide Web is, of course, a huge and wonderful hypertext -- a docuverse.
Many sections of the web, however, are not particularly hypertextual. This
page collects a selection of those web sites that are most interesting and
sophisticated in their use of hypertext structure.
Eastgate Web Workshop | Literary Journals | Fiction | Nonfiction
Original hypertext for the Web.
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- Mark Amerika's center of avant-pop
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- A web-borne revival of a revered literary journal. Fine work, marred
at the moment (June 1999) by a very sluggish server.
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- The literary journal of trAce, a British online writing community.
- The hypertext annex of a revered literary journal.
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- A journal for teachers of writing in webbed environments. Many of
the papers it publishes are interesting hypertexts, albeit the limitations
of the Web -- latency, absence of dynamic links, featuritis -- are often
evident.
- A promising new hypertext literary journal from the University of
Queensland.
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- A web review of original hypertext fiction, edited by Edward
Falco.
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- Brown University's hypertext magazine.
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- Elizabeth Fischer's fine hypertext journal.
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- A hypertext literary magazine, edited by Jeff Parker.
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- Multimedia hypertext fiction by M. D. Coverley. "the sun and the
sand seem as
one...."
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- a short hypertext fiction by Deena Larsen,
author of Marble Springs and
Samplers.
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- Hypertext poetry by Robert Kendall,
author of A Life Set for Two.
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- Short fiction by Edward Falco, author
of A Dream with Demons. "From cobbled
shadows something taunts an inward eye"
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- Short fiction by Michael Joyce, author
of afternoon, a story and Twilight:
A Symphony. He set out thinking there would be a slow disappearance
of the things he considered overwhelming. . .
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- Tree fiction by Gavin Inglis, illustrated by Paul Shade. --Tom. I'm positive. You'd better get a test.
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- by Rick Lazarus. An illustrated tale of renegade replicants. Extensively
linear in the introduction, with richer linking as the story grows.
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- Interlinked multimedia montage explores the story of Vietnam. By Jenny Weight.
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- A new and important hypertextual book tour, by William Gillespie,
Scott Rettberg, Dirk Stratton and Frank Marquardt. Novelist Robert Coover writes that "one of its more impressive achievements is to locate a
frame (the endless tour) that allows for a great range of wildly variant stories without need of a linear chronology."
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- by William Powhilda, third-prize winner of the First Salt Hill Hypertext Contest.
"Unusual people breed unusual things,"
she says to me through the music. I like her already.
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- by Jim Jones. A fictional newspaper whose publisher permits writers
to create fictional news stories.
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- by Adnan Ashraf. Winner of the first NYU Press Prize for Hyperfiction.
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- by Pratik Kanjilal. Winner of the first NYU Press Prize for Hyperfiction.
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- by John Delacor. An extended, hypertextual meditation
on Japan (and, especially, the image of the Japanese woman)
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- Stuart Moulthrop's ambitious and curious web fiction deserves much
more attention than it has received. Michael Shumate gives it a rare
"Highly recommended" in Hyperizons.
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- A small (37 spaces) hypertext story by Rick Pryll.
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- By Michael Shumate, compiler of the invaluable compendium, Hyperizons
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- Matthew Miller, an American trip. (Subscribers only)
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- Martha Conway. Carolyn Guyer wrote in Feed
that this is " well enough written, but accumulates to monotone....One
of the better examples of working within Web constraints. In truth,
this fiction begs for a fuller hypertextual form. I'd like to see it
on disk."
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- Harry Goldstein
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- Michael
Shumate writes that " The story's multilinear structure is conservative
and somewhat illusory--all paths quickly return you to the same narrative
line and lead to the same conclusion. While I don't find this particular
story satisfying, it nevertheless bears reading because Burne can write."
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- A collaborative fiction, directed by Christy Sheffield Sanford.
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- Hypertext fiction by Noah Wardrip-Fruin, Chris Spain and Kirstin Kantner.
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- Noah Wardrip-Fruin.
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- Adrianne Wortzel
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- " *COVEN PRIDE* is a weekly forum dedicated to unclean collaboration
between pseudonymous witches and warlocks..." from the friends and relations
of "Bobby Rabyd," creator of LSD-50
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- A hypertext fiction by
Judy Malloy, Tom Igoe, Chris
Abraham,, Tim Collins, Anna Couey, Valerie Gardiner, Joseph Wilson,
and Doug Cohen.
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- Or, the Discovery of Television Among the Bees; an interlinked experience
by filmmaker David Blair.
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- A highly publicized experiment in collaborative hypertext writing.
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- Trellix founder Dan Bricklin crafts a promising site to promote effective business communication on the Web.
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- Critic Adrian Miles' fascinating one key dance sequence from a memorable and influential film. This analysis builds on topics explored in his
earlier case study,Storyspace on the Big Screen.
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- Shelley Jackson, author of Patchwork Girl, turns her hand to the Web with an exploration of her body.
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- An important and ambitious hypertext on ancient Greek literature, art, and civilization.
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- An extraordinarily ambitious and interesting approach to historical hypertext.
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- A hypertextual letter-to-the-editor from Stuart Moultrop
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- Perhaps the most influential web hypertext on on the subject of hypertext,
a dedicated and serious effort to embrace the hypertext form in the service of
scholarship.
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- An extremely interesting and very hypertextual Masters' Thesis, by Michael Shumate.
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- Matthew Kirschenbaum's doctoral dissertation (in progress) about electronic writing.
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