This section has 7 essays interspersed with more interstices:
is made up of, among other sources, Joyce's first letters to Bolter, the
grant request for Storyspace, and various journal entries. These are the
basis for Joyce's musings about interactive fictions and reader and
author relationships. His skeptical tone in this essay is somewhat
surprising given his more recent utopian writings.
Though this essay would have fit well in the pedogogy section, Joyce says
it belongs here because of "its concerns with artificial intelligence
(AI) and the academic discipline and profession of geography each are
grounded in the genealogy of the writer's consciousness" (10).
was first published in the electronic journal Postmodern Culture
under a longer title. It gathers strands from previous essays and
crosses and recrosses theoretical ground to "weave the helix for a new
argument" (11). Joyce goes on to say:
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"The essay argues, as the whole of this collection in some sense does,
that in the late age of print the topography of the text is subverted and
reading is design enacted. Thus, the choices a text presents depend upon
the complicity of the reader in creating and shaping meaning and
narrative. As more people buy and do not read more books than have ever
been published before, the book is merely a fleeting, momentary
marketable, physical instantiation of the network. Readers face the task
of re-embodying reading as movement, as an action rather than a thing,
network out of book" (11).
was written originally as a talk for a panel called "Hypertext, Narrative
and Consciousness." Joyce later revised and added to it for Richard Gess'
edited collection called Perforations, a magazine-in-a-box. For
Joyce this essay suggests that "the value produced by its readers is
constrained by systems that refuse them the centrality of their
authorship": "What is at risk is both mind and history" (12).
This essay continues the multivocal strands of conversation that wind
through the final chapters of this collection. Here Joyce claims his
clearest attempt to date at explaining his concept of contours and
attempts to enact something like contours through engaging Weinbren's
"interweaving multiple narrative streams."
Joyce says that this essay offers an "aesthetic of surrender" in the
conflict between technology and passion, and "depends upon Helen Cixous's
'third self' and the 'betweenus we must take care to keep' as a way to
sustain the necessary relationship in claiming for constructive hypertext
a surrender of writer to reader (the writer who will be)" (13).
The final essay of this collection includes Joyce's meditations on print
and electronic texts. "Print stays itself; electronic text replaces
itself" and goes on to explore a new paradigm for hypertext that will
allow the present reader "opportunities for capturing the figure of
connections at its interstices" (14).