Eastgate

Hypertext Nonfiction

“…the primary source for serious hypertext” – Robert Coover, The New York Times Book Review

Cultures in Webs

By Roderick Coover.

$35.00 Macintosh/Windows

From anthropology to new media: a study of the use of image and hypermedia to understand dance and storytelling in African villages and the wine harvest in Burgundy.

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Socrates in the Labyrinth

By David Kolb.

$49.95 Macintosh/Windows

A surprising best-seller! A wide-ranging exploration of the relationships between hypertext, thought, and argument -- the foundation of scholarly hypertext.

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Cyborg, engineering the body electric

By Diane Greco.

$49.95 Macintosh/Windows

The cyborg is more than just an interesting fiction; Cyborg: Engineering The Body Electric explores cyborg's impact on political action and personal identity.

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Unreal City

By Christiane Paul.

$49.95 Macintosh

This finely crafted hypertext weaves literature, criticism, history, philosophy, myth, and popular culture into a layered portrait of Eliot's work and cultural context.

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Fragments of The Dionysian Body

By Eric Steinhart.

$49.95 Mac (Requires HyperCard)

Steinhart's clever hypertext and obvious enthusiasm present Nietzsche's aphorisms, metaphors and parables with clarity and energy.

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Writing at the Edge

By George P. Landow.

$49.95 Macintosh

Hypertext theorist George P. Landow opens his fiction workshop to bring you the excitement of reading and writing hypertext with 15 talented young artists.

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The In Memoriam Web

By George P. Landow and Jon Lanestedt.

$49.95 Macintosh/Windows

Landow and Lanestedt's work provides students and scholars with a remarkable perspective on this monument of elegiac verse.

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The Dickens Web

By George P. Landow.

$49.95 Macintosh/Windows

Perhaps the best-known pedagogical hypertext, The Dickens Web remains among the finest examples of hypertextual scholarship.

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Quam Artem Exerceas

By Giuliano Franco.

$24.95 Macintosh/Windows

"What do you do for a living? " This was the question posed by Bernardino Ramazzini (1633-1714), the father of occupational medicine.

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