Rerelease Floppy, Front
1 2015-05-22T16:02:10-07:00 Madeleine Philbrook 793490c7e41f4e0efe523b50970c1632a02f214b 3041 1 The front of the rerelease floppy of Shelley Jackson's Patchwork Girl plain 2015-05-22T16:02:10-07:00 Madeleine Philbrook 793490c7e41f4e0efe523b50970c1632a02f214bThis page is referenced by:
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Photos of the Folio, CD, and Flash Drive and Their Contents for Shelley Jackson's Patchwork Girl
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Photos of the folio, CD re-release, and flash drive re-release and their contents for Shelley Jackson's Patchwork Girl
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2015-05-25T13:55:07-07:00
This section of Pathfinders contains 23 images of Shelley Jackson's folio, CD, and flash drive of Patchwork Girl. The photos detail the material aspect of the work and show the information that readers glean from its presentation.
Folio Contents
1. Floppy disk, 3 1/2," both original folio and re-release version
2. Booklet3. CD, .047" thick and 3.150" in diameter4. Flash Drive, 2014 re-release5. Registration cardGeneral Comments about the Packaging of Shelley Jackson's Patchwork GirlShelley Jackson's Patchwork Girl, by Mary/Shelley and Herself was published in 1995 by Eastgate Systems as a 9" x 6" folio made of heavy card stock. When opened, the folio reveals a pocket on each side. The pocket on the left contains the 3.5" diskette of the work, along with a registration card. Diskettes were of 800 kilobyte "HD" capacity, formatted either for Macintosh or Windows (MS-DOS), since at this point the two operating systems used exclusive data systems. A notation on the reverse of the folio (see image of Folio Back, below) indicates the operating system. There is no indication on the diskette itself.
The pocket on the right side of the folio holds the back page of a 16-page booklet that gives directions for "Getting Started." The look of the folio with its front and back cover and interior paper contents resembles a book environment and, thus provided a breadcrumb leading readers from the world of print to the world of the digital where they were headed with electronic literature. Note that the folio has a minimal spine of about 0.25", sufficient for main title of the work, author's name, and publisher's name, and so may be shelved like a book.
A note on the verso of the folio credits Eric Cohen with "jacket design."
Folio, FrontThe front of the folio shows a title page in the manner of a 19th-century novel such as Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley's Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus. Jackson's full title and description of the work is: "PATCHWORK GIRL, by Mary/Shelley and Herself, a graveyard, a journal, a quilt, a story, & broken accents." The list identifies the major sections of the hypertext. The author's name, Shelley Jackson, follows this list, separated by a decorative graphic. Below the main title is a collaged monochrome graphic, presumably created by Eric Cohen, assembled from four images of women in portrait pose, modified by various digital processes that evoke the allotropic "patchwork" process by which Jackson's title character (and indeed her text itself) comes together. The cover is rendered in black ink over a sepia background that resembles a photographically magnified page from an old book. The text, which may come from Frankenstein, appears in a font that mimics antique handwriting.Folio, BackThe back of the folio continues the book-like design motif, offering contents similar to the back of a traditional print publication. Text on the back of the folio is divided into two parts, upper and lower. The upper part is set off with decorative borders.
The upper part begins with an endorsement by Michael Joyce, the first two lines set as headlines, the remainder as centered body text. Joyce's remarks read:
"Hypertext's next step... PATCHWORK GIRL is spectacular in every sense (from Rayban to Debordian to Cirque du Soleil). It is embodied writing in the company of Helene Cixous, Carolyn Guyer, Jeannette Winterson, and its progenitor and co-author (the other Shelley) Mary. Jackson weaves aspects of the Frankenstein tale, graphic novels, feminist meditation, and pure storytelling into a riveting work of multiple fiction with a fugue-like poetry and an artist's eye distinctly its (and her) own. This is a work of dream and desire and defying boundaries, an electronic collage, a theatre of windows, and a cyborg song of communion and reunion." --MICHAEL JOYCE --
Following Joyce's endorsement is an image of (a young, gamine) Jackson at left, with a thumbnail biography of the author at right. The text reads:
Shelley Jackson A self-described "student of the art of digression," Shelley Jackson holds an AB in studio art from Stanford University and an MFA in creative writing from Brown University. Her work has appeared in Degenerative Prose and various journals, including Conjunctions. She has written and illustrated a children's book, The Old Woman and the Wave, to be published by Orchard Books.
The lower part of the folio back, below the decorative border, begins with a line specifying the disk format (Windows or Macintosh) and advising that either configuration "Requires 2 MB RAM and a hard disk drive." The format selection is indicated with a circular white appliquée.
Publisher's information follows:Published by
Eastgate Systems, Inc. 134 Main Street Watertown, MA 02172 (800) 562-1638 (617) 924-9044
Adjacent to this information, on the right, is the ISBN-10 code for the work, running vertically: 1-884511-23-6. Immediately to the right of the ISBN-10 is a barcode inset.
The opened folio reveals a slot, or pocket, on the left hand side where the diskette is kept. The inside, left-hand side of the folio's cover advertises Diane Greoco's Cyborg: Engineering the Body Electric and provides copyright information for Patchwork Girl. The work is copyrighted 1995 by Shelley Jackson, with all rights reserved. Cover art and documentation are copyrighted by Eric Cohen. Trademark recognition is given for Macintosh and Windows. Publisher information is given here also.
On the right hand side is the 16-page booklet that contains directions for reading Patchwork Girl on both Windows and Macintosh. Also included in the booklet is a biogrpahical sketch of Shelley Jackson and information about where to get answers to technical problems one may have with the work.
Folio, Booklet RemovedAt right is a page advertising the Storyspace Hypertext Writing Environment, the system used to produce Patchwork Girl and other Eastgate titles, some of which are listed in a box at right (Patchwork Girl, A Dream with Demons, afternoon, Victory Garden, Socrates in the Labyrinth, and Cyborg: Engineering the Body Electric).
Booklet, FrontThe covers of the included booklet are printed on thin card stock, with the interior pages on letter stock. Ink is black throughout. The cover of the booklet repeats the folio cover, minus the sepia-toned background and faux-antique text.Booklet, Table of ContentsAt the top of the first page is a list of Contents: Getting Started with Patchwork Girl (one section each for Macintosh and Windows), About the Author, and Questions?
Immediately following are Acknowledgements: "The author would like to thank George P. Landow, Dan Russell, and Robert Coover for their help in the composition of Patchwork Girl."
Booklet, BackThe back cover of the booklet repeats publisher information. It also includes a second indicator of operating-system format, this one including an option for "Both" Windows and Macintosh.
Floppy Disk, FrontThe 3 1/2" diskette containing Patchwork Girl is a double-sided, 800-kilobyte, high density unit marked with the legend "HD" on the black plastic casing. The front of the disk has a white label overlapping onto the reverse, 2 1/4" of the front and 1/2" of the back. The front part of the label shows the title, printed in two lines centered, with author's name directly below it in italic capitals. Underneath is a red containing the text "SERIOUS HYPERTEXT from." Beneath this line and words is the Eastgate logo (a drawing of a stone arch) and contact information for the company. All lettering on the label is in a dark red ink.Floppy Disk, BackThe label on the reverse of the floppy disk reads, "Copyright © 1995 by Shelley Jackson © 1992-95 by Eastgate Systems, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Unauthorized distribution or sale of this material is expressly prohibited."Rerelease, FrontThis is the packaging for a re-published version of Patchwork Girl brought out after all copies of the initial version had been exhausted. The package includes diskette and booklet shrink-wrapped against a cardboard backing.Rerelease, BackThe reverse of the re-release packaging is blank.Rerelease Booklet, FrontThe re-release booklet is identical to the booklet included in the original release.Rerelease Booklet, Table of ContentsThe re-release booklet is identical to the booklet included in the original release.Rerelease Floppy, FrontDiskette included in the re-release packaging shows small differences from the initial release version (beige color, embossed "HD" indicator), but is essentially identical.Rerelease Floppy, BackDiskette included in the re-release packaging is essentially identical to original release.CD Rerelease, FrontThe CD-ROM version of Patchwork Girl was released in 2001, as the standard design of personal computers no longer included a diskette drive. the Compact Disk is readable by both Macintosh and Windows systems.
The cover art (most likely by Eric Cohen) suggests two patches of skin connected by a line of fine sutures. (This image has the unfortunate effect of also looking like a crack in the CD, at first glance.) The title of the work appears in capitals. At left is a copyright statement. Eastgate's copyright date is given as 1992-2001. Author's name appears in large, italic capitals below, followed by publisher information.
CD Rerelease, BackReverse of the CD-ROM is blank except for manufacturer's marks.CD Rerelease Liner, FrontThe CD has an updated cover image by Eric Cohen. His original four-part collage now sits in the middle of a three-image stack. It lies over a lighter image that may suggest scarred skin. Over both this and the collage graphic is a darker image with fine graining suggesting unmarked skin. The left edge of this top image is a smooth but irregular curve which on close inspection shows regular indentations, as from surgical sutures. This line cuts through the collage and the lower graphic, giving the overall composition a striking element of depth. The collage graphic remains in black, with the two new layers both rendered in a red-toned sepia.
Jackson's name, in italic capitals, appears in the upper left corner of the cover. The main title of the work runs in larger capitals along the bottom of the cover.
CD Rerelease Liner, BackThe graphical background for the reverse of the liner is the same as the front. the image of the author shows a somewhat puckish, red-haired Jackson aiming a Polaroid instant camera in our direction. (This image also appears on Jackson's Wikipedia page.)
The biographical sketch has been updated to include several publications subsequent to 1995, including three publications on the World Wide Web (My Body, Stitch Bitch, and Musée Mécanique). More print works are also mentioned, including her story collection The Melancholy of Anatomy, which had yet to appear in 2001. "She lives nowhere in particular and specializes in everything."
CD Rerelease Case, FrontFront of the CD case showing liner cover graphic.CD Rerelease Case, BackMain title of the work runs across the top of the insert in large capitals. Following this are endorsements. Joyce's earlier text is edited to a single line ("Hypertext's next step... spectacular in every sense"). There is a new endorsement from Robert Coover: "Perhaps the true paradigmatic work of the era..." Below is the author's name in large bold italics.
Following this, the legend "CD for Windows and Macintosh OS," and below that, two paragraphs offering operating system advice, first for Windows and then Macintosh, adjacent to the ISBN and barcode inset. Windows system requirements are listed as "Windows 95, 98, NT, me, 2000, XP, or later: insert this CD into your computer, and run SETUP.EXE to install Patchwork Girl. Requires: 486, Celeron, Pentium, or faster processor." Macintosh advice is: "insert this CD into your computer and double-click the "Patchwork Girl installer" to install Patchwork Girl. Requires Mac OS 6.07 or later."
Below these elements, the Eastgate logo flanked at left by contact information, now including an e-mail address, and the Eastgate signature and postal address at right.
CD Rerelease Case, OpenedReverse of the cover liner at left, CD in case at right.USB Stick Rerelease, FrontIn the fourth quarter of 2014, Eastgate re-issued Patchwork Girl with updated installers compatible with current versions of the Macintosh OS. Anticipating a time when standard personal computers will not include CD drives -- already the case on many thin-format laptops -- Eastgate issued the work on a removable storage chip, referred to in their catalog as a "USB stick," and also popularly known as a thumb drive or flash drive. As of June, 2015, the new release is available only for Macintosh.USB Stick Release, BackReverse of the USB stick. Note the distinctive bamboo casing.USB Stick Release, ContentsContents of the USB stick viewed in Mac OS 10.10. Drag-and-drop installation is available for the included version of Patchwork Girl. Note the folders below the installer alias, one each for the "Classic" (pre-OSX) versions of Mac OS, the other for OSX versions prior to 10.7. The PDF document contains a reformatted version of the instruction booklet from the first release.