Hypertext fiction: Difference between revisions
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==Examples== | ==Examples== | ||
[[http://www.glasswings.com.au/GlassWings/modern/24hours/ "24 Hours"]] by Philippa J Burne 1996 [][[Media:http://www.glasswings.com.au/GlassWings/modern/24hours/]] | |||
“Sunshine 69” by Bobby Rabyd [http://www.sunshine69.com/noflash.html] | “Sunshine 69” by Bobby Rabyd [http://www.sunshine69.com/noflash.html] | ||
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“Twelve Blue” by Michael Joyce [http://collection.eliterature.org/1/works/joyce__twelve_blue.html] | “Twelve Blue” by Michael Joyce [http://collection.eliterature.org/1/works/joyce__twelve_blue.html] | ||
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Revision as of 00:41, 11 April 2014
Hypertext Fiction
Hypertext Fiction is a genre of interactive literature that uses hypertext links to direct the reader into sometimes complex, passages throughout the story. These hypertext links can also lead the reader to analogous images. Some hypertext fiction stories are scripted in a fashion that the reader can have a different encounter each time the story is read. The reader selects a link to explore, each time, creating a new experience.
Hypertext Fiction began circulating by floppy disk through a small community of writers in the late 1980’s.
Examples
["24 Hours"] by Philippa J Burne 1996 []Media:http://www.glasswings.com.au/GlassWings/modern/24hours/
“Sunshine 69” by Bobby Rabyd [1]
“Twelve Blue” by Michael Joyce [2]
Works Cited
http://diginarrate.net/2012/03/21/hypertext-fiction-by-liamorourke/
http://nicolebasaraba.com/examples-hypertext-fiction-write-hypertext-narratives/