medium that is the computer, the screen, the
Internet. We wanted to tell our students: “If you
happen to belong to that category: stay calm and
we’ll show how literature can exist in other
platforms”.
Besides this, we wanted to open the scope of literary
studies by integrating into the mainstream other
types of literary and aesthetic expressions so far
excluded from it: especially e-literature or digital
literature (natively digital texts). The gaze that
guided traditional teaching of literature has been de-
centered by the use of e-learning methodologies and
academia will have to explicitly assume their new
locus of enunciation. Its old fashion exclusivity has
to be increasingly replaced by an inclusive view that
will come to consider alternative forms of
expression and to recognize differences and this
could be a paradigmatic change promoted by the use
of technology. We intended to develop a forum of
debate for these questions from inside an academic
subject, an optional subject though. Its main goal is
to rethink the role of literary studies at the beginning
of the twenty-first century and with the use of e-
learning. We expected to investigate the conflicts the
discipline is facing and the paths it has been
following in its diverse forms.
3 LITERARY STUDIES &
DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES
With this intention we created a piece of Digital
Literature in Catalan (the Diary of an Absence), to
show our students what a piece of digital narrative
could be and to provide them the real and complex
experience of reading the new literature in its own
medium and with its own rules. Since we wanted our
students to act as literary critics of works of digital
literature but the existing works worldwide would
have been a challenge to the linguistic competence
of most of the students, we have designed a work of
digital literature with different surfing possibilities
so that students can undertake an authentic and
complete exercise of literary criticism.
There are several categories inside what we
consider digital literature from web texts to
programmed digital texts, cybertexts (Aarseth 1997),
texts that are not only in digital format, but they also
use the digital format in producing effects which are
not possible in print. These digital texts are based on
a hypertextual structure (text is divided into shorter
segments, which then are connected to each other
with user-controllable links), but their functionality
is not limited to hypertextuality. In a technical sense
these text documents are actually computer
programs, and as such they may include all the
functionality a computer program can offer.
Temporal manipulation and control especially gain
wholly new potential with cybertexts in what has
been called “cybertextual narrativity” (Eskelinen
1999), where it is possible to strictly control the
reading time. For example, a text page may change
every 30 seconds forcing the reader to this reading
rhythm if she wants to read at all, or, make the text
change of form, explode, rain, move, etc. With the
current software, it is relatively easy to produce
kinetic texts. Even though this, at a first glance, may
seem more as case of movement and spatiality, it
naturally requires the possibility to control the
appearance of the text during a certain time period.
Thus, the temporal dimension is certainly essential
for kinetics. But if kinetics seemed to be more
inviting for poets than to prose writers, we have used
'Flash” to create this kinetic effect inside the text.
Of course all the multimedia imaginable may be
used, that is, the text may include sound, moving
image etc. We can find a complete variation of the
limited reading time when texts can only be read
once: after the text disappears from the screen, it is
deleted from the memory and cannot be accessed
again until next reading. In the opposite strategy the
reading time can also be somehow extended when it
is not possible to proceed from one part of the work
to another before a certain period of time –in this
case of read text- has passed. If the reader completes
the whole reading, follow the different paths and can
finally read every piece of single text hidden on the
CD, then there is a kind of “bonus track” text that
ideally closes the reading exercise, closes the
reading process of the work.
4 ARCHITECTURE OF THE
DIARY OF AN ABSENCE
Arranged in the form of a diary, the study case we
have developed follows the paths of absence by
delving into the pain that is caused by desire, a
desire that is reflected in the particular mixture of
emotions that is faced in the separation from the
loved one. To the idea of introspection arising from
the exercise of spiritual reflection and the flood of
torn feelings that this brings, there appears the idea
of the house as a cloister, which is the scenario in
which the tale in our hypertext exercise has been set.
The apparently illogical ups and downs of the
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