In February 2000 Robert Coover, who had once announced the arrival of hypertext to the broad audience of the New York Times Book Review, declared that the golden age of hypertext was over (Literary Hypertext: The Passing of the Golden Age - German Translation). One reason according to Coover is that the web "has not been very hospitable" to serious hyperfiction but has rather supported superficial, opportunistic events: "It tends to be a noisy, restless, opportunistic, superficial, e-commerce-driven, chaotic realm, dominated by hacks, pitchmen, and pretenders, in which the quiet voice of literature cannot easily be heard or, if heard by chance, attended to for more than a moment or two. Literature is meditative and the Net is riven by ceaseless hype and chatter. Literature has a shape, and the Net is shapeless." Concerning the multimedial web he states: "hypertext is now used more to access hypermedia as enhancements for more or less linear narratives […] the reader is commonly obliged now to enter the media-rich but ineluctable flow as directed by the author : In a sense, it's back to the movies again, that most passive and imperious of forms." Coover notes the "constant threat of hypermedia: to suck the substance out of a work of lettered art, reduce it to surface spectacle". Coover focuses upon the threat of visualisation and employs three prejudices concerning digital writing:
***This paper was presented at DAC (2-4, August 2000, Bergen/Norway). For an expanded version see German Digital Literature: An Introduction |