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OverviewFar from causing the ""death of the book,"" the publishing industry's adoption of digital technologies has generated a multitude of new works that push the boundaries of literature and its presentation. In this fascinating new work, Élika Ortega proposes the notion of ""binding media"" — a practice where authors and publishers ""fasten together"" a codex and electronic or digital media to create literary works in the form of hybrid print-digital objects. Examining more than a hundred literary works from across the Americas, Ortega argues that binding media are not simply experimentations but a unique contemporary form of the book that effectively challenges conventional regional and linguistic boundaries. Furthermore, the book demonstrates that binding media have remained marginal in the publishing industry due to technological imperatives like planned obsolescence and commercial ones like replicability and standardization that run counter to these bespoke literary projects. Although many binding media and other hybrid publishing initiatives have perished, they've left behind a wealth of material; collecting and tracing the residues of these foreshortened projects, Ortega builds a fascinating history of hybrid publishing. Ultimately, this essential account of contemporary book history highlights the way binding media help illuminate processes of cultural hybridization that have been instigated by the expediency of globalized digital technologies and transnational dynamics. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Élika OrtegaPublisher: Stanford University Press Imprint: Stanford University Press Edition: New edition ISBN: 9781503641785ISBN 10: 1503641783 Pages: 340 Publication Date: 04 March 2025 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction 1. Binding Media: Negotiating (Un)Boundedness 2. From the Digital Revolution in Publishing to a Material History of Hybrid Books 3. Divergent Temporalities in Binding Media 4. Media Hybridity and Cultural Hybridity Conclusion: From Computer-Generated Books to NFT Publishing Appendix: Binding Media Corpus Notes Bibliography IndexReviews""Binding Media bursts a number of convenient critical seams: media essentialisms, the textual and the tactile, and the still-too-typical overreliance on monolingual literatures. This close and careful study will be appreciated by all who read our increasingly diverse and hybrid archive."" —Matthew Kirschenbaum, University of Maryland ""This book's heterogeneous, Hemispheric, multilingual corpus explores a new ecology of reading between print and digital formats. Ortega's 'media poetics' elegantly sidesteps the binaries of material versus electronic, stable versus ephemeral, embracing the friction of collaborative modes of production and consumption."" —Marcy Schwartz, Rutgers University Author InformationÉlika Ortega is Assistant Professor in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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