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Computer-Mediated Communication Magazine / Volume 2, Number 3 / March 1, 1995 / Page 7

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Works Cited

by Nancy Kaplan

Birkerts, S. (1994) The Gutenberg Elegies. London, Faber and Faber.

Bolter, J. D. (1991) Writing Space: The Computer, Hypertext, and the History of Writing. Hillsdale, NJ, Lawrence Erlbaum.

Bolter, J. D. (1984) Turing's Man: Western Culture in the Computer Age. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press.

Cleveland, H. (1985) "The Twilight of Hierarchy: Speculations on the Global Information Society," in Guile, B., Information Technologies and Social Transformation,Washington DC, National Academy.

Darnton, R. "What is the History of Books?" in Davidson, C. (Ed) Reading in America: Literature and Social History. Baltimore, The Johns Hopkins University Press, pp. 27-52.

Eisenstein, E. (1983) The Printing Press as an Agent of Change: Communications and Cultural Transformations in Early-Modern Europe (Vols. 1-2). Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.

Haas, C. and Neuwirth, C. (1994) "Writing the Technology That Writes Us: Research on Literacy and the Shape of Technology" in Selfe, C. and Hilligoss, S. (Eds) Literacy and Computers: The Complications of Teaching and Learning with Technology. New York, Modern Language Association, pp. 319-335.

Hardison, O. B. (1989) Disappearing Through the Skylight: Culture and Technology in the Twentieth Century. New York, Viking.

Hirsch, E. D. (1987) Cultural Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know. Boston, Houghton Mifflin.

Foucault, M. (1984) "What Is an Author?" in Rabinow, P. (Ed), The Foucault Reader. New York, Pantheon, pp. 101-20.

Joyce, M. (1991) "Selfish Interaction or Subversive Texts and the Multiple Novel" in Berk, E, and Devlin, J. (Eds) Hypertext / Hypermedia Handbook. New York, McGraw-Hill, pp. 79-92.

Kaplan, N. (1991) "Ideology, Technology, and the Future of Writing Instruction" in Hawisher, G. and Selfe, C. (Eds) Evolving Perspectives on Computers and Composition Studies: Questions for the 1990s, Urbana, IL, NCTE, pp. 11-42.

Kearney, R. (1988) The Wake of Imagination: Toward a Postmodern Culture. Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press.

Kernan, A. (1990) The Death of Literature. New Haven, Yale University Press.

Knoblauch, C. H. and Brannon, L. (1984) Rhetorical Traditions and the Teaching of Writing. Upper Montclair, NJ, Boynton/Cook.

Landow, G. P. (1992) Hypertext: The Convergence of Contemporary Critical Theory and Technology. Baltimore, Johns Hopkins UP.

Lanham, R. (1993) The Electronic Word: Democracy, Technology, and the Arts. Chicago, University of Chicago Press.

Moulthrop, S. (1991) "Toward a Paradigm for Reading Hypertexts: Making Nothing Happen in Hypermedia Fiction" in Berk, E, and Devlin, J. (Eds) Hypertext / Hypermedia Handbook. New York, McGraw-Hill, pp. 65-78.

Nelson, T. (1994) Literary Machines. Sausilito, CA, Mindful Press.

Ong, W. J. (1982) Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word. New York, Methuen.

Postman, N. (1993) Technopoly: The Surrender of Culture to Technology. New York, Vintage Books.

Selfe, C. (1989) "Redefining Literacy", in Hawisher, G. and Selfe, C. (Eds) Critical Perspectives on Computers and Composition Instruction, New York, Teachers College, pp. 3-15.

Selfe, C. and Meyer, P. (1991) "Testing claims for on-line conference" Written Communication, 8(2), pp. 162-192.

Tuman, M. (1992) Word Perfect: Literacy in the Computer Age. Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh University Press.

Wells, H. G. World Brain. Garden City, NY, Doubleday.

Williams, R. Television: Technology and Cultural Form. Hanover and London, University Press of New England.

This page is part of the article, "E-literacies: Politexts, Hypertexts and Other Cultural Formations in the Late Age of Print."


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