What's down the road?


Where writing is, odds are cyberspace is in reach. And where there is writing, there will be literature, always and ever evolving. Cyberspace-connected computers are now unequivocally a part of the daily fabric of modern life. Robert Coover's words, written in 1992, are still true: "Hypertext is truly a new and unique environment. Artists who work there must be read there. And they will probably be judged there as well: criticism, like fiction, is moving off the page and on line, and it is itself susceptible to continuous changes of mind and text." We are at the beginning of this new medium for literary expression, the technology of cyberspace changing almost before our eyes. "Standard HTML pages with black text and blue links are already becoming the online equivalent of silent movies," notes Digital Fiction's Andy Campbell. "The internet will undoubtedly transform into a world somewhere between "CD Roms and interactive television.

And what of predictions about cyberspace itself? The world wide web is, says Robert Kendall, "Publishing's Awakening Giant," the title of his Poets&Writers article on the topic. The "most important development we've had in writing/publishing since Gutenberg," Alt-X's Mark America says of the web, and the development is moving faster all the time. "Predictions about the future size...speed, and function of the Internet are futile. The same goes for writing a book about today's digital medium. By the time the book gets copy-edited, typeset, printed, and shipped, the subject matter isn't so emerging anymore," quipped Edward Picot.

This then is the most dramatic difference between what was before and what will come after in the world of words. Print lit has remained essentially the same for hundreds of years, cyberlit will continue to morph along with each technological advance. So it will be when today's technologies are old and a future researcher stumbles upon this site only to judge its information out of date yet mildly of historical value. Meanwhile, Marshall McLuhan's "insurgent technologies" will continue to "give rise to new structures of feeling and thought, new manners of perception."

And the "consensual hallucination" that William Gibson called "cyberspace" will grow to be as common as the city library (and perhaps it already has). (1) Some, though, like Campbell, will see this flooding sea of change as a challenge and create new visions to fit it:

As the increasing speed and popularity of broadband pumps more and more quality and versatility into full motion video on the web, Digital Fiction clings onto words and language in the hope of telling stories, 'exploring narratives', without completely becoming film. It's a vision that tries to discover the future for writers who do not wish to produce straightforward novels or scripts, but who want to hold on to the power and possibility of their own words and sentences, and whatever might manifest around them.
Will there be a change in the cyber-literary process itself, that is, its freedoms, its copyright issues, its mercantile dimension? No doubt. The works read and discussed here have been given over to the prevailing consensual cyberlit-mentality, that is their being offered via free access to the world-wide web or via an on-line publishing concern that conducts business in either the "free" model, or the "mercantile" model. However, many of the "free" publishing concerns are now experimenting with ways for readers to pay for the cyberlit experiences. It is all in flux; stay tuned; such is the technological age we live in.

What about cyberliterature itself? "The new media...are not toys," Marshall McLuhan once said; "they can be entrusted only to new artists."

With every generation more comfortable with the magic of this consensual hallucination and its creative potential, its literature will grow, even have its own literary geniuses, even perhaps its own satirists. As cyberpoet Brian Kim Stefans dreams: "We only need the coming of a Satirist—no one of genius is rarer—to prove that the cyberpoem can have much the same edge that Dryden and Pope laid down."

For the rest of us, including all future cyberwriters, hypermedia poet David Knoebel offers this reminder and challenge:
The English language includes more than 250,000 words.
Good combinations are still available.