"From
its adventuresome spirit, and its deliberately provisional methodology,
to its desire to reform academic discourses and practices, there is
much to like about Marcel O’Gorman’s E-Crit. The author
argues that critical methodologies, disciplinary structures, and entire
universities need to be revised in order to accommodate a more open,
less hierarchical, more visually intensive and culturally relevant
education. This book makes an important contribution by advancing
our thinking about how digital media can and should be incorporated
in to academia."
-
N. Katherine Hayles, Department of English, UCLA
"E-Crit
is a bold attempt to redefine scholarly communication in an era characterized
by the arrival of digital media. The problem that the author addresses
is this: New technologies of communication and representation (the
Internet, computer graphics) seem to be implicated in fundamental
shifts in popular media forms and in the delivery of scientific and
even scholarly texts. Many critics in the humanities are exploring
these issues in their work. However, the form of the work itself remains
largely unchanged and unexplored. This is the paradox that O’Gorman
seeks to confront, and his approach is both radical and practical.
He attempts both explain and exemplify his E-Crit approach - to understand
how digital writing can be different from linear writing for print,
and to train his students in a new form of digital representation."
-Jay
Bolter, Wesley Chair in New Media, Georgia Institute of Technology
Visit
the author's web site
Access
the book at amazon.com
Visit
the E-Crit Program at the University of Detroit Mercy