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The paratexts of Inanimate Alice: thresholds, genre expectations and status

  • Gavin Stewart

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    21 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    In her book Writing Machines, N. Katherine Hayles described the concept of the technotext. Hayles used this concept to provide an analysis of a range of texts, including online work, based on their materiality. The analysis described in this article complements this method by developing an approach that explores the conditions of production of contemporary digital literature. It achieves this aim by providing a close reading of the online paratextual elements associated with the first four episodes of Inanimate Alice by Kate Pullinger and Chris Joseph. In doing so, it modifies the print-based analytical framework provide by Gérard Genette and others to develop a detailed account of the off-site, on-site and in-file paratexts of this online work. It sets out a range of thresholds that mould the reception of this text. It also notes how they position it within wider discourses about genre, media, literature and literacy. This article concludes by exploring the limits of this paratextual reading. It discusses whether it provides an adequate account of the material conditions of these texts. It then seeks to integrate this approach into the vision of literary studies described by Hayles in Writing Machines.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)57-74
    JournalConvergence
    Volume16
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2010

    Keywords

    • N. Katherine Hayles

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