| 
       | 
       | 
         
          Forepaper by
         Roberto
         Simanowski for Messenger Morphs the Media
         99
TOWARDS A POETICS OF HYPERFICTION  
         
          Necessity of evaluation
         
          Regarding hyperfiction there are four groups to
         distinguish: a) those, who produce hyperfiction, b) those,
         who read it, c) those, who ignore it, and d) those, who read
         hyperfiction to review it. I admit to belong to the last
         group. I am not sure, if authors prefer scholars of
         literature, who belong to the group of ignorants, rather
         than the ones who are reviewers. I also understand, there
         might be some reasons that make a meeting of authors and
         critics tricky. The sense of innovation, the creative genius
         doesn't quite fit with the eagerness to comment and
         criticize&endash;especially when old standards for new
         phenomena are used. Nevertheless, we need to discuss
         hyperfiction from an academic perspective. We need a poetics
         of hyperfiction &endash; not as much an aesthetics, which is
         about art and truth, perception, social impact, mimesis and
         catharsis, but a poetics, which is about the right use of
         poetical or technical means. The more the literary field of
         hyperfiction is being established &endash; and it is about
         to be established considering the number of conferences,
         public competitions of hyperfiction, magazines, marketing
         companies and a growing hyperfiction-author-society &endash;
         the less it can tolerate the lack of a professional review.
         
           
         
          Criteria as questions
         
            Now, what are the criteria to evaluate
         hyperfiction? This is probably one of the most exciting and
         difficult questions concerning hyperfiction, and there is
         simply no yellow brick road to follow. This is not about
         usability, this is not about ability to design. This is
         about aesthetical values of technical devices. Those devices
         are so different from program to program that one may object
         to constructing general theories about hyperliterature at
         all. (1) On the other hand, there are
         certain aspects one will find in most of hyperfiction:
         navigation, linkage, multimediality. Maybe we can find some
         criteria to evaluate hyperfiction by listing the typical
         characteristics of it and raising the inherent questions. I
         see the following main issues:
         
           
         
          
            Multimediality: How is the mutual impact of
            text, picture, and sound; what about the multimedial
            competence of the author?
            
            Technical aesthetics: How is the relation
            between artistical and technical ingenuity; in other
            words, does the engineer beat the poet?
            
            Performance: How and to what end is the
            reading process programmed (e.g., by setting time for the
            course of nodes)?
            
            Links: Does the link transfer a specific
            meaning?
            
            Navigation: Which meaning does the structure
            transfer, and which role does the reader play in putting
            together the segments of text?
            
            Screen aesthetics: How is the screen used as a
            unit of representation?
           
         
          Kitsch in hyperfiction
         
            The jury of the German hyperfiction-competition
         (organized by the newspaper DIE ZEIT and IBM for three years
         now) claimed in 1996, among the hyperfictions evaluated
         there was little sentimentality and kitsch but more joy of
         playing with the new technology.
         (http://www.ZEIT.de/tag/litwett96/verfahren.html)
         
         
          The addition was that sometimes this desire to play
         seemed to have displaced the search to articulate one's own
         experience.
         (http://www.ZEIT.de/tag/litwett96/laudatio.html)
         This leads to a main question of any poetics: what is kitsch
         and what is it supposed to be in terms of hyperfiction.
         
            The question of kitsch opens a big can of worms,
         for here we might be well advised just to refer to a common
         definition of kitsch, which is based on aspects of
         encountering and using the aesthetical material. In this
         definition kitsch is understood as 1) the unreflected
         desire, without distance for contemplation, and 2) the
         oversimplified signification of an aesthetical means.
         (2)
         
            Considering point 1 in terms of hyperfiction we
         have to admit that we find technophilia without distance of
         contemplation in many examples of hyperfiction. I mean the
         use of technical devices without real meaning, e.g., a link
         which is just a link, but doesn't transfer any specific
         meaning, or a sophisticated animation effect which does not
         represent more than itself. Here the engineer has beaten the
         poet. We might call this the celebration of technology; it
         fits with what in terms of kitsch is called the unreflected
         desire. It is reminiscent of the ornamentation, which kitsch
         has been doing to simple, functional goods since the late
         19th century. Here, kitsch with a huge aesthetical effort
         pretends a special meaning where there is actually no
         special meaning. One can find this excessive use of
         aesthetical means of attraction in hyperfiction. Well,
         hyperfiction can be campy.
         
            Considering point 2, we know that we can find a
         lot of oversimplified semantization of aesthetical or
         technical means. A link from the word emptiness to an empty
         white page might be one example.
         
          Appropriate use of technical devices
         
            There are two ways to produce kitsch in
         hyperfiction: either giving the aesthetical/technical mean
         no obvious meaning, or giving it a meaning which is too
         obvious. I will give two examples of an appropriate use of
         hyperfiction technology.
         
            A: There is one node (number 047) in Stuart
         Moulthrop's hyperfiction
         HEGIRASCOPE
         which starts with the words "This is the dream of remote
         control. In this dream you can press a button whenever you
         like and totally reconceive the world around you. Click, you
         are two hundred feet tall looking down on sleeping suburbia
         [...]" Having read approximately to this line, the node
         disappears, turns to a black screen with a single word in
         the middle &endash; click. Of course, this is a false link.
         Nothing happens; one has to go back to finish reading the
         dream. One should hurry in doing this, since the screen will
         change again and again. So, the reader not only does not get
         the promised feeling of remote controls, rather he feels as
         though he himself is being controlled remotely. This meaning
         of the link and the programmed time-effect complements, or
         to say more exactly, modifys the meaning of the letters.
         However, there is even more: browsing the black screen, the
         reader will encounter many hidden links. The occurrence of
         these links modifys the meaning once more and makes the
         technical device the major element of meaning.
         
            B: An second example from one of the prizewinners
         of the 1998 German hyperfiction-competion is the following:
         In Jürgen Daiber's and Jochen Metzger's
         TROST
         DER BILDER a man cut his artery and is watching his
         blood forming a pool on the carpet. The round image circling
         in the background of text is taken to be the pool of blood.
         When the phone rings, the man decides that if it rings ten
         times more he will answer it, finish the conversation
         quickly, and then call the emergency. It does. But the call
         is not what he expected, nobody really cares for him. It's
         the pizza service having realized that the man had ordered
         pizza nine times they are offering the tenth pizza for free.
         As the reader realizes this turn of events, the round image
         has turned to a small one at the bottom of the text. It is a
         pizza, and it is set now behind the last word like a huge
         dot.
         
          Discussion
         
            These are some thoughts in approaching a poetics
         of hyperfiction from an academic perspective. At the
         workshop I would like to discuss - if the listed criterias
         meet the demands - what further questions should be asked -
         if kitsch in hyperfiction is to be defined in the way I did
         - how the manner of writing and reading hyperfiction affects
         the reviewing of it.  
         
          References
         
            (1) Espen J. Aarseth: Cybertext.
         Perspectives on Ergodic Literature, Johns Hopkins
         University Press, Baltimore and London 1997, p. 79: "It is
         dangerous to construct general theories about
         hyperliterature. Instead we must look at each system as a
         potentially different technical medium, with aesthetically
         distinct consequences."
         
          (2) Ludwig Giesz: Phänomenologie
         des Kitsches, München 1960.
         
       | 
       | 
         
            
         
         
          
      
       |