closure

By Hannah Ackermans, 16 November, 2015
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Abstract (in English)

Ever since the early theorizing of electronic literature, both the beginning and ending of these literary works has been seen as problematic issues. In the spirit of Umberto Eco’s “open work” (in English 1989), especially hypertext works were considered challenging to the closed nature of literary work – there may be several entrances to the work, but even more importantly, there is no fixed ending but rather, alternative, optional exit points. J. Yellowlees Douglas’s The End of Books or Books without End, a cornerstone in this field, provided a detailed analysis of M. Joyce’s Afternoon, putting much emphasis on its various endings.

If the early 1990’s theoretical discussion was mainly concerned with hypertext, the current electronic literature scene with its dozens of new modes of expression, technologies and genres, has grown used to the fact that most of the works do not offer a definite ending, but either a set of alternative endings, or, no obvious ending at all. The openness of dynamic ergodic literature has become such a naturalized phenomenon that there has not been much theoretical interest in the question of ending in electronic literature lately.

The end, however, plays a crucial role in the interpretation and understanding of literature (cf. Reading for the Plot by P. Brooks, 1984 and The Sense of an Ending by F. Kermode, 1967), and this holds true for electronic literature as well. Thus, it is important to investigate the strategies of ending in digital works, and what kind of consequences they have for understanding them. In this paper, we will concentrate on digital fictions with narrative content. Tentatively, it may be stated that they all create a structure of multiple temporalities, and this multiplicity is directly related to the types of ending strategies employed.

Through analysis of various works of digital literature, both old and new, such as Califia by M.D. Coverley (2000), Screen by N. Wardrip-Fruin & al. (2003), Deep Surface by S. Moulthrop (2007), TOC by S. Tomasula & al. (2014), we will focus on the temporalities of digital fiction, both related to its nature as a programmed entity (ergodic time), and as a fictional construct (fictional time), and on what kind of endings they provide. It seems that the two main options are: 1. running out of time in the concrete sense, as in Deep Surface, where there is a strict temporal constraint and when the time ends, the reading ends as well, with a sense of failure, an abrupt ending without proper closure, and 2. running out of time in the metaphorical sense of transcending the fictional time and reaching a new level of experience, as in Califia with its circular hypertext structure and the transcendence offered by reaching the Ocean. These two strategies may be combined, too, as in Screen, where there is a “forced transcendence” as the fictional world collapses when the reader, inevitably, runs out of time in the game-like interactivity with the text.

(Source: ELO 2015 Conference Catalog)

By Jill Walker Rettberg, 7 June, 2013
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ISBN
0472111140
Pages
205
Record Status
Librarian status
Approved by librarian
Abstract (in English)

J. Yellowlees Douglas looks at the new light that interactive narratives may shed on theories of reading and interpretation and the possibilities for hypertext novels, World Wide Web-based short stories, and cinematic, interactive narratives on CD-ROM. She confronts questions that are at the center of the current debate: Does an interactive story demand too much from readers? Does the concept of readerly choice destroy the author's vision? Does interactivity turn reading fiction from "play" into "work" - too much work? Will hypertext fiction overtake the novel as a form of art or entertainment? And what might future interactive books look like?

(Source: Book jacket)

Creative Works referenced
Description (in English)

A visual poem created with Macromedia Flash. It pictures a self that strives with closure and isolation. The theme of the work is the relation between individual world and external environment.

(Source: 2002 ELO State of the Arts gallery)

Screen shots
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The Hollow screenshot 1
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The Hollow screenshot 2
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The Hollow screenshot 3
By Eric Dean Rasmussen, 16 February, 2012
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Publication Type
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Year
Pages
189-222 (Hyper/Text/Theory)
License
All Rights reserved
Record Status
Abstract (in English)

Published in Hyper/Text/Theory (1994). Rpt. in Norton Anthology of Postmodern American Fiction.

Creative Works referenced
By Jill Walker Rettberg, 15 October, 2011
Publication Type
Language
Year
Pages
642-660
Journal volume and issue
41.4
License
All Rights reserved
Record Status
Creative Works referenced
By Jill Walker Rettberg, 15 October, 2011
Publication Type
Language
Year
Pages
159-188
License
All Rights reserved
Record Status
Abstract (in English)

Early critical article on narrative closure in both print and hypertext fiction that was developed into the book End of Books, Books without End. Provides an early and influential analysis of Joyce's afternoon, a story.

Creative Works referenced
By Jill Walker Rettberg, 14 January, 2011
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Language
Year
Journal volume and issue
21 June 1992
Record Status
Abstract (in English)

Coover's "The End of Books" essay in the New York Times significantly introduced hypertext fiction to a wider literary audience. The essay describes that ways that hypertext poses challenges for writers and readers accustomed to coventional narrative forms, including assumptions about linearity, closure, and the division of agency between the writer and reader.

Pull Quotes

Much of the novel's alleged power is embedded in the line, that compulsory author-directed movement from the beginning of a sentence to its period, from the top of the page to the bottom, from the first page to the last. Of course, through print's long history, there have been countless strategies to counter the line's power, from marginalia and footnotes to the creative innovations of novelists like Laurence Sterne, James Joyce, Raymond Queneau, Julio Cortazar, Italo Calvino and Milorad Pavic, not to exclude the form's father, Cervantes himself. But true freedom from the tyranny of the line is perceived as only really possible now at last with the advent of hypertext, written and read on the computer, where the line in fact does not exist unless one invents and implants it in the text.

Although hypertext's champions often assail the arrogance of the novel, their own claims are hardly modest.

With hypertext we focus, both as writers and as readers, on structure as much as on prose, for we are made aware suddenly of the shapes of narratives that are often hidden in print stories. The most radical new element that comes to the fore in hypertext is the system of multidirectional and often labyrinthine linkages we are invited or obliged to create.

How does one resolve the conflict between the reader's desire for coherence and closure and the text's desire for continuance, its fear of death? Indeed, what is closure in such an environment? If everything is middle, how do you know when you are done, either as reader or writer? If the author is free to take a story anywhere at any time and in as many directions as she or he wishes, does that not become the obligation to do so?