Differences exist between today's hypertextual theories, but they all share several important things in common.
They are all works of academic humanists, who see in the development of electronic writing the realization and popularization of phenomena described in literary theory. They also represent the only serious attempts to date to apply ideas developed in academic circles to electronic publishing. However, the rapid evolution of new media since 1992 and 1993 raises a simple but important question: How well do they explain today's world?
More precisely, how does the technological and commercial development of the World Wide Web and ebooks on the market challenge hypertext theory? What do the experiences of electronic publishers reveal about the strengths and weaknesses of the literature and politics? Finally, what are the most promising avenues of future research, and what scholarly tools and theories might be profitably applied in their exploration?
Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts -
PHONEREADER Free Library - - Jean-Philippe Pastor
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