hypertext novel writing

Content type
Author
Year
Publisher
Language
Publication Type
Platform/Software
ISBN
9788896922057
Record Status
Description (in English)

 

"Verrà H.P. e avrà i tuoi occhi" is a story of a love that has split. It is the story of the father. It's the story of a game that has no rules, it's the delirium of a sick person. It is a story that does not want to become a novel, but that must be told the same, going back, imagining what could have happened. Imagining all the things that could have happened. Provided that the connection does not fall.

Source: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/9337893-verr-h-p-e-avr-i-tuoi-occhi

By Chiara Agostinelli, 15 October, 2018
Year
Record Status
Abstract (in English)

 

What are we talking about when we say “digital literature” today? If the early works of electronic literature – hypertext fiction, hypermedia literature, generative texts – could be identified by the distinguishing feature of hyperlink or technology in a wider sense, nowadays Twitterature, literary blogs, and Facebook writings challenge more and more the possibility to define this kind of literature under a solely technology-based perspective. The Canada Research Chair on Digital Textualities' project “Répertoire des écrivaines et écrivains numériques,” inspired by the CELL project, is an attempt to mind the existing gap between these new textual objets and literary studies. In this presentation, we will show and discuss the criteria upon which we have defined what is a digital literary object and a digital author, the archiving modalities of those objects, and the epistemological structure of our project in order to think about the impact of the digital turn on literary concepts such as author, authorship, literary work, and genre.

Source: https://sites.grenadine.uqam.ca/sites/nt2/en/elo2018/schedule/619/The+%…

Description in original language
By Daniele Giampà, 12 November, 2014
Publication Type
Year
Record Status
Abstract (in English)

Fabrizio Venerandi is author of two novels published in form of hypertextual ebooks and also co-founder of the publishing house Quintadicopertina. In this interview he talks about the book series Polistorie (Polystories) and about the basic ideas that inspired this project. Recalling the experience he made with the groundbreaking work on the first MUD in Italy in 1990, Venerandi describes the relations between literature and video games. Starting from a comparison between print literature tradition and new media, at last, he faces the problems of creation and preservation of digital works.

Abstract (in original language)

Fabrizio Venerandi è autore di due romanzi pubblicati in forma di ebook ipertestuali ed è anche cofondatore della casa editrice Quintadicopertina. In questa intervista parla della collana delle Polistorie e delle idee di fondo che hanno ispirato questo progetto. Ricordando l’esperienza legata al lavoro pioneristico al primo MUD italiano del 1990, Venerandi descrive la relazione tra letteratura e i video giochi. Da un paragone tra la tradizione della letteratura a stampa e i nuovi media, infine, affronta il problema della creazione e della preservazione delle opere digitali.

Creative Works referenced
Organization referenced
Publisher Referenced
By Daniele Giampà, 12 November, 2014
Author
Publication Type
Year
Record Status
Abstract (in English)

In this interview, Carlo Cinato, author of the hypertext novel L’uomo senza cappello e la donna con le scarpe grigie (The man without a hat and the woman with grey shoes) and curator of the blog Parolata, explains how he started getting interested in electronic literature and how he conceived his novel. Through the study of hypertextual and non sequencial books in printed form he discovered a new way of writing which was adaptable to the technical possibilities of the web and the ebooks. According to Cinato there are analogies between literary works of the print tradition and the digital tradition, but in particular the latter are characterised by the possibility of making a leap inside the text. The hypertextual structure alters the role of the reader, the materiality of the text, the way of reading and the way to write for an author. Moreover Cinato sees the writing of the novel as an experiment. It was an occasion to write by using one of the seven hypertext links he has pinpointed. In the end he explains in which way the hypertextual structure changes the way of reading and how it can be installed also in ebooks.

(Source: Interviewer's abstract)

Abstract (in original language)

In questa intervista Carlo Cinato, autore del romanzo ipertestuale L’uomo senza cappello e la donna con le scarpe grigie e curatore del blog Parolata, spiega come è nato l’interesse per la letteratura elettronica e di come ha concepito il suo romanzo. Attraverso lo studio di romanzi cartacei con strutture narrative ipertestuali e non sequenziali ha scoperto una nuova forma di scrittura che si adatta alle possibilità tecniche di internet e degli ebook. Secondo Cinato esistono varie analogie tra opere letterarie della tradizione a stampa e quella digitale, ma in particolare quest’ultima si contraddistingue per la possibilità di fare dei salti all’interno del testo. La struttura ipertestuale altera la il ruolo del lettore, la materialità del testo, il modo di lettura e il modo di scrivere di un autore. La stesura del romanzo è stata anche la prima occasione per provare a scrivere utilizzando uno dei sette tipi di link ipertestuali individuati da Cinato. Infine spiega come la struttura ipertestuale cambia la lettura e di come possa essere inserita anche negli ebook.