Lexia To Perplexia
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Lexia to Perplexia is a poetic work of
electronic literature Electronic literature or digital literature is a genre of literature encompassing works created exclusively on and for digital devices, such as computers, tablets, and mobile phones. A work of electronic literature can be defined as "a constr ...
published on the web by Talan Memmott in 2000. The work won the trAce/Alt-X New Media Writing Award that year.


Description of the work

The web-based work was a runner-up to the ELO Fiction award in 2001 and was described by judge
Larry McCaffery Lawrence F. McCaffery Jr. (born May 13, 1946) is an American literary critic, editor, and retired professor of English and comparative literature at San Diego State University. His work and teaching focuses on postmodern literature, contemporary ...
as an "absolutely drop-dead gorgeous, mystifying, cryptifictional hyper-assemblage". Lisa Swanstrom describes it as "a fragmented narrative visually complemented by empty grids, snippets of source code, and cluttered signs of death and mourning." The work itself consists of four sections: "The Process of Attachment", "Double-Funnels", "Metastrophe" and "Exe.Termination". Aaron Angello explains that each section explores "the complex relationship and illusory borders between subject and machine, between reader and text, between human language and computer code, and between flesh and silicone." Memmott himself describes ''Lexia to Perplexia'' as falling "somewhere between theory and fiction, between the rigorous and the frivolous." It has been described as
codework Codework is "a type of creative writing which in some way references or incorporates formal computer languages (C++, Perl, etc.) within the text. The text itself is not necessarily code that will compile or run, though some have added that requireme ...
, mixing everyday English with neologisms and computer code.


Technical obsolescence

''Lexia to Perplexia'' was coded in
Dynamic HTML Dynamic HTML, or DHTML, is a term which was used by some browser vendors to describe the combination of HTML, style sheets and client-side scripts (JavaScript, VBScript, or any other supported scripts) that enabled the creation of interactive ...
and
JavaScript JavaScript (), often abbreviated as JS, is a programming language that is one of the core technologies of the World Wide Web, alongside HTML and CSS. As of 2022, 98% of Website, websites use JavaScript on the Client (computing), client side ...
, and no longer works in contemporary web browsers. Zach Whalen describes how browser updates in 2012 and 2013 rendered it nonfunctional, and although Whalen altered the code to create a readable version, this did not last. Whalen interprets this as a planned obsolescence on Memmott's part, and concludes that this "gradual obsolescence, prolonged only by backward-compatibility, is just the final part of its fictive performance". According to Aaron Angello, Memmott has "refused to “fix” or “update” the poem, because he contends that that would make it something other than what it was intended to be. Rather, he is choosing to let the poem die because that is what the poem is supposed to do." Angello sees this as a political resistance as it "refuses to play capital's game".


Reception

''Lexia to Perplexia'' was awarded the trAce/Alt-X New Media Writing Award in 2000, and was included in the ''Electronic Literature Collection Volume One''. It has been on the syllabus at MIT and Yale. As Aaron Angello writes, "If digital literature and poetry can be said to have a canon, ''Lexia to Perplexia'' is a central part of it." Several scholars have published extensive analyses of ''Lexia to Perplexia'', including N. Katherine Hayles "Metaphoric networks in ''Lexia to perplexia''" in ''Digital Creativity'', which focuses on how the mixture of code and human language situates the computer as a "cognizer" alongside the human reader, and Lisa Swanstrom's ""Terminal Hopscotch": Navigating Networked Space in Talan Memmott's ''Lexia to Perplexia''" in ''Contemporary Literature''.


External links


''Lexia to Perplexia'' in the Electronic Literature Collection Volume One


References

{{Authority control Electronic literature Electronic literature works 2000 books Internet culture 2000 poems