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online reading culture
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Journal Article
Poetics Today (2021) 42 (2): 149–172.
Published: 01 June 2021
...: How Reading Culture Is Adapted on the Internet .” In “Adaptation as Cultural Translation,” edited by Fehrle Johannes and Schmitt Mark . Special issue, Komparatistik Online 2018 : 60 – 86 . www.komparatistik-online.de/index.php/komparatistik_online/article/view/191/145...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2019) 40 (1): 1–6.
Published: 01 March 2019
...Omri Herzog; Tamar Hager Complex changes have buffeted the discipline of literature during the past decades, calling on us to rethink its academic and cultural definitions, boundaries, and territories. Texts which until recently have not been examined within literary studies (such as films, online...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2020) 41 (4): 503–537.
Published: 01 December 2020
... display, by means of modifications, or what are called in the article lit mods . Thus, the article proposes an approach for a more informed reading and understanding of digital kinetic poems, since they are ever-changing events. Finally, it locates the work’s aural and performative versions in a cultural...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2021) 42 (2): 321–324.
Published: 01 June 2021
... technology in inclusive universal designs for learning. She is currently leading a national interdisciplinary research project on reading success for dyslexic children. Birgitte Stougaard Pedersen is associate professor in aesthetics and culture at Aarhus University. She is editor of the international...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2021) 42 (2): 253–279.
Published: 01 June 2021
... are moving targets, especially when much reading is being done on screens. Evidence suggests that online reading (which favors brevity) is encouraging both authors and publishers to create shorter texts than in earlier years (Baron 2015 : Chapter 3). Moreover, digital reading often entails engaging...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2021) 42 (2): 131–147.
Published: 01 June 2021
... their latest book haul). In short, reading can be a form of participation, but not all participation in literary culture equals reading. This disjunction leads to the pertinent question of whether reading is primarily active or passive. In some analyses of modern media culture, users who do not join online...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2022) 43 (2): 335–362.
Published: 01 June 2022
... content” on Tumblr, humor was a noticeable mode of engagement, as well as a detached and sarcastic metacommentary. These features of online culture call for a nuanced reading of different situated meanings and connotations, and the polyphony of the aforementioned traces and marks. Another example...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2022) 43 (2): 309–334.
Published: 01 June 2022
...) that were created with awareness of each other; and (c) were circulated, imitated, and/or transformed via the Internet by many users.” Memes, an important visual method of online communication since the 1990s, have been described as being “like a funhouse mirror for culture and society, reflecting...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2012) 33 (3-4): 488–490.
Published: 01 December 2012
...Eyal Segal Lancashire Ian , Forgetful Muses: Reading the Author in the Text . Toronto : University of Toronto Press , 2010 . xiii + 339 pp. © 2013 by Porter Institute for Poetics and Semiotics 2013 New Books at a Glance
Marina Grishakova and Marie-Laure Ryan, eds...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2012) 33 (3-4): 490–495.
Published: 01 December 2012
...Eyal Segal Carroll Joseph , Reading Human Nature: Literary Darwinism in Theory and Practice . New York : State University of New York Press , 2011 . xvi + 352 pp. © 2013 by Porter Institute for Poetics and Semiotics 2013 New Books at a Glance
Marina Grishakova and Marie...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2012) 33 (3-4): 485–488.
Published: 01 December 2012
... and written features in online discourse. She attempts to outline
the basic parameters of the communicative frameworks that allow such an
interaction, to varying degrees, between users. (Such parameters include,
for example, feedback mechanisms, the user’s possibilities of interference
with the online...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2012) 33 (3-4): 495–499.
Published: 01 December 2012
... at a Glance 487
of spoken and written features in online discourse. She attempts to outline
the basic parameters of the communicative frameworks that allow such an
interaction, to varying degrees, between users. (Such parameters include,
for example, feedback mechanisms, the user’s possibilities...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2012) 33 (3-4): 499–501.
Published: 01 December 2012
... and written features in online discourse. She attempts to outline
the basic parameters of the communicative frameworks that allow such an
interaction, to varying degrees, between users. (Such parameters include,
for example, feedback mechanisms, the user’s possibilities of interference
with the online...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2012) 33 (3-4): 501–503.
Published: 01 December 2012
... and written features in online discourse. She attempts to outline
the basic parameters of the communicative frameworks that allow such an
interaction, to varying degrees, between users. (Such parameters include,
for example, feedback mechanisms, the user’s possibilities of interference
with the online...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2022) 43 (3): 479–532.
Published: 01 September 2022
... fusing “internet chat-room drivel and spam scripts” into a “studied blend of the offensive, the sentimental, and the infantile” (Magee and Mohammed 2003 ). Instagram is less conducive to community-driven social deconstruction, however, partly because online consumerist culture already unabashedly opens...
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Journal Article
Poetics Today (2022) 43 (2): 265–286.
Published: 01 June 2022
... 2019 ). References Abidin Crystal 2018 . Internet Celebrity: Understanding Fame Online . Bingley, UK : Emerald . Agha Asif . 2007 . Language and Social Relations . Cambridge : Cambridge University Press . Blommaert Jan , with Smits Laura and Yacoubi...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2004) 25 (1): 67–90.
Published: 01 March 2004
... and read in distributed cognitive environments; and they initiate and demand cyborg reading practices. © 2004 by the Porter Institute for Poetics and Semiotics 2004 Aarseth, Espen J. 1997 Cybertext:Perspectives on Ergodic Literature (Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press). Barthes...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2022) 43 (2): 287–308.
Published: 01 June 2022
... , Giaxoglou Korina , and Seargeant Philip . 2021 . “ Stories in everyday life: from Instagram to electoral politics .” Presentation (online) at Contemporary Cultures of Writing Seminar Series 2021: The Personal as Political, March 30, The Open University, UK , https://www.open.ac.uk/arts/research...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2019) 40 (2): 299–318.
Published: 01 June 2019
... in creating different “medialities,” oscillating between a rather classic if somewhat dated late-night show TV mediality and a comparatively more up-to-date online mediality. Last Week Tonight thus establishes both a unique look and a hybrid communicative strategy to address a wide audience and answer...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2014) 35 (1-2): 51–116.
Published: 01 June 2014
...).
Chapters 5 and 6 consist of more elaborate close readings of several inter-
views. Chapter 5 examines the sociological function of the literary interview
in American celebrity culture and the way authors like Ernest Hemingway,
Robert Frost, and Marianne Moore perform and construct their “public
selves...
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