We chose these four because they are long-form works that represent a specific individual contribution unique to the field as well as reflect a wide range of experimentation taking place during this period. For example, Malloy’s
Uncle Roger, the first commercial work of electronic literature to be sold in the United States, was first published in 1986 as a serial novel delivered to an online audience on the
Whole Earth ‘Lectric Link (
WELL). Later iterations expressed on floppy disks and the web speak to its enduring popularity and give rise to its status as a classic work of the period. John McDaid's
Uncle Buddy's Phantom Funhouse was produced with HyperCard, a software application available on early Apple computers for creating hypermedia. Like Malloy's
Uncle Roger,
Uncle Buddy's is a novel, but one that includes sound and printed elements as part of its storytelling strategy. Shelley Jackson's
Patchwork Girl, produced with Storyspace––a hypertext authoring system created and sold by Eastgate Systems ideal for long-form, complex writing––is viewed by many as the high point of hypertext literature generating from the pre-web period of the early digital age. Its recent re-release on flash drive, 20 years after its first publication, demonstrates its on-going status as an important work of contemporary fiction. Finally, Bill Bly's hypertext novel
We Descend, also produced with Storyspace, takes advantages of the affordances of this tool to experiment successfully with the
multi-temporal narrative and intricate narrative structure.
In developing the project, we have striven to provide information helpful to scholars. Publication dates, versions, production methods have been vetted by publishers and artists when possible. Thus, we hope to clear up discrepancies relating to this information as well as offer information previously unknown about these works. Judy Malloy's
Uncle Roger serves as a case in point. While many scholars know that she published "A Party in Woodside" in 1987, they may not be aware that she updated and republished it in 1988. Nor it is well-known that the Modern Museum of Art holds a copy of the 1987 version of
Uncle Roger, numbered
"no. 10.", a fact highlights the work's status as a work of art.
This open-source, multimedia book, is funded by
The National Endowment for the Humanities through a Start Up grant from the Office of Digital Humanities. The NEH support made it possible to work directly with the artists, develop the materials for this book, and create this book for open-source access. Without the assistance from the NEH,
Pathfinders would not have been possible.
Many individuals also provided support for our research. Madeleine Brookman served as Grigar's research assistant and was funded through fellowships and grants provided by Washington State University. She was responsible for final edits for and the management of all of the videos found in the book, the production of the Pathfinders trailer, and uploading, tagging and describing media for the book. We acknowledge the videography of Aaron Wintersong and early organization by Amalia Vacca, who served as Grigar's first research assistant and who helped to organize the traversals and interviews. Greg Philbrook provided tech support for most traversals and interviews. We also thank the Modern Language Association for allowing us to exhibit our Pathfinders research at the 2014 conference in Chicago. We appreciate the support of Will Luers who helped us design the book and Tara McPherson, Erik Loyer and others at the University of Southern California's The Alliance for Networking Visual Culture for the development of the Scalar platform on which the book is built. We thank Matthew Kirschenbaum and the Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities at the University of Maryland College Park for sharing The Bly Collection with us for our project. We want to recognize Grigar’s Electronic Literature Lab at Washington State University Vancouver, which provided access to her collection of computers and works for this project. We thank Mark Bernstein for taking the time to answer questions about publication dates and packaging, as well as give us access to images needed for the book. Finally, we thank the four artists who provided their time and insights into their work. They all shared so much of their knowledge, history, insights, and time to this project. Literary history is better for it.The development of this project is documented at the
Pathfinders blog managed by Grigar. Also of note is the
Pathfinders YouTube channel where rough cuts of videos were made available, early on, for scholars to use for their research and the curated
Vimeo channel where all videos are now hosted.
The exhibit, mentioned previously, that showcases these authors and their works as well as contemporary expressions of experimental writing at the Modern Language Association's 2014 convention is archived at
Pathfinders: 25 Years of Experimental Literary Art. It ran from 9-11 January and was curated by Grigar and Moulthrop. Literary scholars were able to preview the videos and photos developed for the project and access some of works on Grigar's vintage computers, though it should be noted that three of the computers shipped to Chicago were destroyed en route to the exhibit.
Finally, we are already thinking ahead to the next version of Pathfinders, which will include Moulthrop's Victory Garden, an afterword by Joseph Tabbi, and perhaps transcriptions of the traversals for each artist. In a word, we see this project as one that will continue, adding artists and their works and capturing important information that needs to be documented for posterity.
Funders and Collaborators