The Electronic Word: Democracy, Technology, and the Arts

By Scott Rettberg, 7 July, 2013
Publication Type
Language
Year
ISBN
9780226468853
Pages
xv, 285
License
All Rights reserved
Record Status
Librarian status
Approved by librarian
Abstract (in English)

The personal computer has revolutionized communication, and digitized text has introduced a radically new medium of expression. Interactive, volatile, mixing word and image, the electronic word challenges our assumptions about the shape of culture itself.This highly acclaimed collection of Richard Lanham's witty, provocative, and engaging essays surveys the effects of electronic text on the arts and letters. Lanham explores how electronic text fulfills the expressive agenda of twentieth-century visual art and music, revolutionizes the curriculum, democratizes the instruments of art, and poses anew the cultural accountability of humanism itself.

(Source: Publisher's catalogue copy)

Contents

1: The Electronic Word: Literary Study and the Digital Revolution2: Digital Rhetoric and the Digital Arts3: Twenty Years After: Digital Decorum and Bi-stable Allusions4: The Extraordinary Convergence: Democracy, Technology, Theory, and the University Curriculum5: Electronic Textbooks and University Structures6: Strange Lands, Strange Languages, and Useful Miracles7: The "Q" Question8: Elegies for the Book9: Operating Systems, Attention Structures, and the Edge of Chaos10: Conversation with a Curmudgeon