‘This strange process of typing on a glowing glass screen’: Una Entrevista con Matthew Kirschenbaum

Autores/as

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14195/2182-8830_4-2_13

Palabras clave:

literary history, word processing, writing technologies, writing scene

Resumen

Track Changes, by Matthew Kirschenbaum, tells the early history of word processing, roughly situated between 1964—when the IBM Magnetic Tape/Selectric Typewriter (MT/ST) was advertised as a word processing system for offices—and 1984—when the Apple Macintosh generalized the graphical user interface in personal computers. The history of word processing both as technological process and mode of textual production is deeply entangled with the changes in the technologies of writing as they reflect and contribute to efficiency and control in increasingly bureaucratic processes of social administration and organization. The literary history of word processing can be situated within this general computerization of the modes of production of writing. Kirschenbaum’s methods combine archival work in special collections and writers’ archives, oral interviews with writers and engineers, and hands-on descriptions of historical word processing machines. Track Changes is the subject of this interview.

Descargas

Los datos de descargas todavía no están disponibles.
Matthew Kirschenbaum foto)

Publicado

2016-07-11

Cómo citar

Portela, Manuel. 2016. «‘This Strange Process of Typing on a Glowing Glass screen’: Una Entrevista Con Matthew Kirschenbaum». MATLIT: Materialidades De La Literatura 4 (2):267-75. https://doi.org/10.14195/2182-8830_4-2_13.

Número

Sección

Entrevista | Interview

Artículos más leídos del mismo autor/a

1 2 > >>