The author has 2084 posts

confused bench narrative

[In which I steal an entire blogpost from Networked Performance, a very useful blog detailing new works in brief. Some people steal whole posts routinely and call it reblogging. I’m not convinced that it’s cool but I’m doing it anyway right now.] […]

rereading “Steady Stream”

I mentioned Richard Powers’s email story, They Come in a Steady Stream Now, last week, enjoying it but not being very impressed. Nick, on the other hand, likes it very much. He has several interesting points in his post at GtxA. For […]

qwikiwiki

Wow. I’ve been thinking my web design and web aesthetics students next semester need to use wikis. But I’d worried wikis were hard to set up. Well, no. The Wikipedia’s entry on wiki software recommended QwikiWiki as extremely easy to install, no […]

many meanings of blog

Goodness. I had no idea that ?• blogge (Norwegian for “to blog”) is also perfectly good (though somewhat rare) Norwegian for piercing a fish with a sharp instrument until blood runs from it. It comes from old Norse, blo??ga, and is (possibly) […]

blogging and truth

Don’t have time to blog this properly, but a post that spells out my thoughts better than I seem to have done on this matter: Does truthful blogging really just point out the difficulty of telling the (unvarnished, unplotted) truth? (PishTosh: Narrative, […]

gymwheels

I would love to try spinning in these wheels. My daughter has had a go and is determined that the second she’s ten and old enough this will become her sport. (I hope she keeps her fingers.)

blogging makes writing easier

Profgrrrl has experienced that glorious side effect of blogging: the kind of blogging that involves putting your opinions in writing on a regular basis, and dealing with responses from others, makes other writing – like academic paper writing – much, much easier: […]

email story by Richard Powers

Richard Powers (one of whose novels I’ve been meaning to read) published a short email narrative, “They Come in a Steady Stream Now” in the latest edition of Ninth Letter, a journal out of the University of Illinois. Though it’s not really […]

turtlepox

Via email from Noah, TurtlePox, a writing project where you might receive an email from a friend that would “infect” you, and if it didn’t kill you, you could mutate it and pass it on by changing some of the wording and […]

social and scholarly

One of my greatest aha! moments learning about hypertext theory was when I at a conference naively commented, over drinks I expect, that hypertext requires links. A spatial hypertext expert (I think it must have been Frank Shipman, or maybe Gene Golovchinsky, […]