The age of computers and telecommunications that we are living in has generated new sites and forms of literacy, a new visual and techno-oral culture fast replacing the culture of the book.
Listservs, chat rooms, discussion boards, instant messages, and the web, to name but a few, have enabled forms of discursivity that are unfettered by regional and national borders and challenge the boundaries established by print culture between the private and the public, the author and the reader, the aesthetic and the instrumental. ‘The end of the book’ in this sense is not only and simply the disappearance of the book as an object, but a radical restructuring of the institutions that surround it — institutions such as the library, the university, intellectual property laws, and literature itself.
The workshop on electronic textuality aims to contribute to an understanding of the new forms of cultural literacy and the institutional changes they necessitate by exploring the questions that the electronic word poses for literary and cultural studies and by delineating the forms of textuality, rhetoricity, fictionality, and historicity embodied by electronic texts.
Some of the strategic imperatives that may be addressed in this context are: