Subversive Texts and the Multiple Novel
Joyce outlines 4 single sentence musings in this essay and proceeds to
connect them to each other.
1. Interactive fictions are largely figments of our imaginations.
Joyce says he wants to doubt this but cannot, since, for him and most of
us, true interaction means that the system responds to the user as much
as the user responds to the system and that each should alter the
behavior of the other. This becomes the starting point for Joyce to speak
to our expectations of interactivity. He goes on to claim that true
interactivity does exist in the form of the text editor or data
structure,
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"especially during the early stages of the learning curve as we come
to use them. For during that time we convince ourselves that we know the
story of our own thought at least as often as the application reminds us
that we do not know its representation. Likewise, we imagine we give
structure to a formless conceptual space, only to discover that the space
itself is a labrynth of glass walls within which we unravel skeins of our
thought in order to find our way. An error message or a dialogue box at
such times becomes an utterance from an offstage demon. We accommodate
our thought to the system, and the system accommodates our thought; we
interact" (136).
He then goes on to explain what he thinks future interactive texts will
look like. They will appear "more closed" in order to be more open, "more
like current print fiction, than the computer programs we currently
consider to be interactive."
2. The first level of interaction precedes the creation of any
text.
I think by this he means that the very act of writing, whether using the
print medium or electronically, supposes that there will be an
interaction with a reader somewhere. In his words,
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"...the preprocessing results in the creation of and intricately
networked novel-as-knowledge-structure that both simultaneously invites
and confirms reader interaction" (138).
In making this point he uses Finnegan's Wake, Hopscotch,
and Tristam Shandy as examples of works that contain
multiplicities as "intricate as any we envision for interactive fictions"
(138). This move does a couple of interesting things. First it ties known
works of literature to the hypertext fiction effort, which is an attempt
to add credibility to hypertext fiction for those who prefer more
traditional literature. It also partially reveals the wellspring of
hypertext. We see, perhaps, a history to this movement that for some has
come out of nowhere, with no apparent impetus from "respectable"
literature practices.
3. It is likely that no one interrupted Homer.
"Or perhaps there were drunken hecklers then" (141). And I chuckle out
loud at the image and think of my preconcieved notions about literary
fiction. "Since the technology has existed for some time, why don't
people write alternate chapters in the blank spaces of bound novels or
alternate sentences in the blank spaces between printed sentences?" Good
question. Joyce goes on to talk about the relationship between the reader
and what is read, pointing out how we do not suspend all thought while we
read. We plan out what will happen in each successive sentence in
each coming page. Then, we "selfishly seek confirmation or our
alternative choices within a text" by gauging how correctly or
incorrectly we anticipated the unfolding drama of the work. Hypertext
fiction has the power to alter this dynamic, though the power has always
been there, we have not been encouraged to participate in this manner.
4. Suppose a text can anticipate unpredictable variations upon it.
Is this possible? Our print history screams "no!" and points to the
barriers of the page. Joyce calls our attention to a phenomenon in
computer science called "interference, the concurrency
problem, or software interraction" where in complex systems
where layer upon layer of software is interacting together, unanticipated
"side effects" happen. This is where the debugging begins. Joyce quotes
Umberto Eco:
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"Sooner or later someone understands in some way the reason for the
connection and the necessity of the factual judgement that does not as
yet exist. Then, and only then, is it shown that the course of
successive contiguities, however tiresome, was traversable or that it was
possible to institute certain transversals. Here is how the factual
judgement, anticipated in the form of an unusual metaphor, overturns and
restructures the semantic system in introducing curcuits not previously
in existence"
(146).
So, we wait for a "text that can anticipate unpredictable variations upon
it" and wonder if Storyspace, or any other hypertext software, really
allows for this to happen.