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	<title>msa &amp;laquo; WordPress.com Tag Feed</title>
	<link>http://en.wordpress.com/tag/msa/</link>
	<description>Feed of posts on WordPress.com tagged "msa"</description>
	<pubDate>Mon, 07 Dec 2009 11:40:38 +0000</pubDate>

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	<language>en</language>

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<title><![CDATA[Started to work on my TC-2000 and got my new Hugger]]></title>
<link>http://jimmysjogren.wordpress.com/2009/12/07/started-to-work-on-my-tc-2000-and-got-my-new-hugger/</link>
<pubDate>Mon, 07 Dec 2009 07:50:04 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>jimmysjogren</dc:creator>
<guid>http://jimmysjogren.wordpress.com/2009/12/07/started-to-work-on-my-tc-2000-and-got-my-new-hugger/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Yeasterday I went to Denmark to do an exchange with my old Hugger in medium for a Hugger in small wi]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p>Yeasterday I went to Denmark to do an exchange with my old Hugger in medium for a Hugger in small with some new features and this one fits me even better than my old one. After work today I might start kiting it up and we&#8217;ll see what it brings.</p>
<p>Also I painted my TC-2000 yeasterday as well and added some tan velcro on the sides. I&#8217;m gonna do some more jobs on it before I post pictures on it but I can say that I love it already and you can never compare the real deal to the ACM china models that are out there.</p>
<p>I opened the TEA PTT yeasterday as well and started to plan the modification of it for my radio and it won&#8217;t be too hard to get to rock.</p>
<p><a href="http://jimmysjogren.wordpress.com/files/2009/12/imag0182.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-667" title="IMAG0182" src="http://jimmysjogren.wordpress.com/files/2009/12/imag0182.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="400" /></a></p>
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<title><![CDATA[It's official]]></title>
<link>http://mnemehoshiko.wordpress.com/2009/12/06/its-official/</link>
<pubDate>Sun, 06 Dec 2009 12:36:53 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>mnemehoshiko</dc:creator>
<guid>http://mnemehoshiko.wordpress.com/2009/12/06/its-official/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;m no longer on MIT MSA Exec. *Starts crying tears of joy* It was one of the most elightening]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p>I&#8217;m no longer on MIT MSA Exec.<br />
*Starts crying tears of joy*<br />
It was one of the most elightening and depressing endeavors ever.</p>
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<title><![CDATA[The punching bag]]></title>
<link>http://efenem.wordpress.com/2009/11/26/the-punching-bag/</link>
<pubDate>Thu, 26 Nov 2009 19:04:19 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>efenem</dc:creator>
<guid>http://efenem.wordpress.com/2009/11/26/the-punching-bag/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[In the MSA blog there is one chatbox on the top right. It was created during my time, there is no sp]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[In the MSA blog there is one chatbox on the top right. It was created during my time, there is no sp]]></content:encoded>
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<title><![CDATA[Flu epidemic]]></title>
<link>http://efenem.wordpress.com/2009/11/25/flu-epidemic/</link>
<pubDate>Wed, 25 Nov 2009 16:50:16 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>efenem</dc:creator>
<guid>http://efenem.wordpress.com/2009/11/25/flu-epidemic/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Aaaarrrrrghhh is the appropriate response to the one week “holiday” announcement. Flu epidemic is ba]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[Aaaarrrrrghhh is the appropriate response to the one week “holiday” announcement. Flu epidemic is ba]]></content:encoded>
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<title><![CDATA[MSA Spanksgiving Party]]></title>
<link>http://radspace.wordpress.com/2009/11/23/msa-spanksgiving-party/</link>
<pubDate>Mon, 23 Nov 2009 13:41:54 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Radagast</dc:creator>
<guid>http://radspace.wordpress.com/2009/11/23/msa-spanksgiving-party/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;d like to apologize for writing something on topic &lt;/snark&gt; Great party the other nigh]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p>I&#8217;d like to apologize for writing something on topic &#60;/snark&#62; Great party the other night thrown by the Manhattan Spanking Association &#8212; accent on the &#8220;ass&#8221; in &#8220;association&#8221;.</p>
<p><!--more-->First of all, I&#8217;ll cut to the chase and mention that MSA is now hosting their parties in a new, much bigger location. The space was excellent especially the common room where people could gather and socialize &#8212; a much better situation than the cramped quarters in the old location. The parties there were good but the better digs kicks it up a notch. Other than the common room, there was a nice kitchen area which puts the food and drink in one place and much easier to keep from toppling over onto the floor or on a spanking bench. The party area is also divided among two floors with most of the play rooms on the lower floor, giving it that extra bit of privacy from the noise and music of the socializing party goers.</p>
<p>The best thing is that the rooms still have that privacy that the old place had &#8212; rooms, comfortably furnished, with doors that close. A decent amount of privacy for a spanking party. I&#8217;m probably waxing poetic but it was the best MSA party yet thrown and makes me look forward to the next one in December.</p>
<p>Next up will be the SSNY Anniversary Party &#8212; one year and counting. This will be followed by OTK Night at Paddles the next evening (don&#8217;t forget the munch that takes place before it). Hopefully the spanks will continue through the holiday season because it tends to get depressingly vanilla this time of year.</p>
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<title><![CDATA[its all filth -- white or black -- keep away-- depend on Allah (SWT)]]></title>
<link>http://islaminaction.wordpress.com/2009/11/18/its-all-filth-white-or-black-keep-away-depend-on-allah-swt/</link>
<pubDate>Thu, 19 Nov 2009 00:53:35 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Ml. Muhammad Shoayb</dc:creator>
<guid>http://islaminaction.wordpress.com/2009/11/18/its-all-filth-white-or-black-keep-away-depend-on-allah-swt/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Q. ok fair enough, blk magic is forbidden. Read your answers on em. Can we have white magic for good]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p><strong>Q. </strong>ok fair enough, blk magic is forbidden. Read your answers on em. Can we have white magic for good health on ourselves? (Friday night student, personal email box)</p>
<p><strong>A. </strong>All types of magic must be stayed away from. They stem from the agents of shaytan. Their intention is control matters away from the Mercy of Allah (Subhanahu Wata’Ala) to the pitch of shaytan and the lowly urges and desires of humans. Stay away from them all.</p>
<p>Good filth and bad filth are both filth. They affect ones Imaan. They affect our relationship with people. They eventually fail us &#8212; sometimes in this world, sometimes in the hereafter, and other times, in both the worlds. May Allah (SWT) save us from all types of manipulation.</p>
<p><em>Allah certainly knows best.</em></p>
<p><em>(Student # 745</em></p>
<p><em>as dictated by imaam)<br />
</em></p>
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<title><![CDATA[Finaly a MSA MICH TC-2000]]></title>
<link>http://jimmysjogren.wordpress.com/2009/11/12/finlay-a-msa-mich-tc-2000/</link>
<pubDate>Thu, 12 Nov 2009 08:19:37 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>jimmysjogren</dc:creator>
<guid>http://jimmysjogren.wordpress.com/2009/11/12/finlay-a-msa-mich-tc-2000/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Who doesn&#8217;t need a MSA MICH TC-2000? &#8211; I DO! Since I had a repro helmet before which I t]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p>Who doesn&#8217;t need a MSA MICH TC-2000? &#8211; I DO!</p>
<p>Since I had a repro helmet before which I thought was ok and I always thought &#8220;why do you need a real helmet when not even throwing real bullets and THAT big of a difference can&#8217;t it be?!&#8221; &#8211; Well it is! A huge difference! The pads is no-where the same, the size even tho it&#8217;s medium (I&#8217;m a X-small in clothes basicly) and fits me perfectly and the chinstraps is actually placed in the middle and not in the chin when you tighten it.</p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-562" title="msamichtc2000" src="http://jimmysjogren.wordpress.com/files/2009/11/msamichtc2000.jpg" alt="msamichtc2000" width="600" height="269" /></p>
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<title><![CDATA[Late pictures from Ruinstaden in Stockholm 24/9 2009]]></title>
<link>http://jimmysjogren.wordpress.com/2009/11/10/late-pictures-from-ruinstaden-in-stockholm-249-2009/</link>
<pubDate>Tue, 10 Nov 2009 20:37:10 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>jimmysjogren</dc:creator>
<guid>http://jimmysjogren.wordpress.com/2009/11/10/late-pictures-from-ruinstaden-in-stockholm-249-2009/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[I just noticed that I&#8217;ve forget to post pictures from the event in Stockholm that were two mon]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p>I just noticed that I&#8217;ve forget to post pictures from the event in Stockholm that were two months ago. I don&#8217;t have much and nothing special but at least complete gear photo that I can provide which doesn&#8217;t happen too often.</p>
<p>If you&#8217;re interested in know what gear I have please leave a comment.</p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-542" title="ruinstaden" src="http://jimmysjogren.wordpress.com/files/2009/11/ruinstaden1.jpg" alt="ruinstaden" width="600" height="1250" /><br />
<img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-543" title="ruinstaden2" src="http://jimmysjogren.wordpress.com/files/2009/11/ruinstaden2.jpg" alt="ruinstaden2" width="600" height="1131" /></p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-544" title="ruinstaden3" src="http://jimmysjogren.wordpress.com/files/2009/11/ruinstaden3.jpg" alt="ruinstaden3" width="600" height="1276" /></p>
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<title><![CDATA[Alleged Shooter's Name Prompts Response from American Muslims]]></title>
<link>http://makkah.wordpress.com/2009/11/05/alleged-shooters-name-prompts-response-from-american-muslims/</link>
<pubDate>Fri, 06 Nov 2009 04:10:38 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Rafik</dc:creator>
<guid>http://makkah.wordpress.com/2009/11/05/alleged-shooters-name-prompts-response-from-american-muslims/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Tom Cohen, cnn.com Washington (CNN) &#8212; Ibrahim Hooper knows the drill. When news first broke Th]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[Tom Cohen, cnn.com Washington (CNN) &#8212; Ibrahim Hooper knows the drill. When news first broke Th]]></content:encoded>
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<title><![CDATA[Hayles: Flickering Connectivities in Patchwork Girl]]></title>
<link>http://comppost.wordpress.com/2009/11/05/hayles-flickering-connectivities-in-patchwork-gilrthe-importance-of-media-specific-analysis/</link>
<pubDate>Fri, 06 Nov 2009 02:54:25 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Sean Meehan</dc:creator>
<guid>http://comppost.wordpress.com/2009/11/05/hayles-flickering-connectivities-in-patchwork-gilrthe-importance-of-media-specific-analysis/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br />
Flickering Connectivities in Shelley Jackson&#8217;s<br />
Patchwork Girl: The Importance of Media-Specific<br />
Analysis</p>
<p>N. Katherine Hayles<br />
University of California Los Angeles<br />
HAYLES@humnet.ucla.edu</p>
<p>© 2000 N. Katherine Hayles.<br />
All rights reserved.<br />
&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-</p>
<p>1. Five hundred years of print have made the conventions of the<br />
book transparent to us.[1] It takes something like Sol Lewitt&#8217;s<br />
Squares with the Sides and Corners Torn Off to bring into<br />
visibility again the convention of the page.[2] The pages<br />
display black squares, centered with white margins, that indeed<br />
have their corners torn. But the sides appear to be<br />
intact&#8211;until we realize that the square in question is not the<br />
black image but the entire page, cropped during production. For<br />
some time now writers and artists working in the medium of<br />
artist books have delighted in arranging such jolts of surprise,<br />
exploring, transgressing, and exploding the conventions of the<br />
book while still retaining enough &#8220;bookishness&#8221; to make clear<br />
they remain within its traditions, even as they redefine and<br />
expand what &#8220;book&#8221; means. Their work reminds us how important it<br />
is to engage the specificity of media.</p>
<p>2. The long reign of print has induced a kind of somnolence in<br />
literary and critical studies, a certain inattentiveness to the<br />
diverse forms in which &#8220;texts&#8221; appear. Literary criticism and<br />
theory are shot through with unrecognized assumptions specific<br />
to print. Only now, as the new medium of electronic textuality<br />
vibrantly asserts its presence, are these clearly coming into<br />
view. Re-reading Roland Barthes&#8217;s influential essay &#8220;From Work<br />
to Text,&#8221; I am struck both by its presceince and by how far we<br />
have moved beyond it. As Jay David Bolter and George Landow have<br />
pointed out, Barthes&#8217;s description of &#8220;text,&#8221; with its<br />
dispersion, multiple authorship, and rhizomatic structure,<br />
uncannily anticipates electronic hypertext (Bolter, Writing<br />
Space; Landow, Hypertext). &#8220;The metaphor of the Text is that of<br />
the network,&#8221; Barthes writes (61). Yet at the same time he can<br />
also assert that &#8220;the text must not be understood as a<br />
computable object,&#8221; computable here meaning limited, finite,<br />
bound, able to be reckoned (57). Written twenty years before the<br />
advent of the microcomputer, his essay stands in the ironic<br />
position of anticipating what it cannot anticipate. It calls for<br />
a movement away from works to texts, a movement so successful<br />
that the word &#8220;text&#8221; has become ubiquitous in literary<br />
discourse, almost completely displacing the more specific term<br />
&#8220;book.&#8221; Yet Barthes&#8217;s vision remains rooted in print culture,<br />
for he defines the text through its differences from books, not<br />
through its similarities with electronic textuality. In urging<br />
the use of &#8220;text,&#8221; Barthes was among those who helped initiate<br />
semiotic and performative approaches to discourse. But this<br />
shift has entailed loss as well as gain. Useful as<br />
poststructuralist approaches have been in enabling textuality to<br />
expand beyond the printed page, they have also had the effect of<br />
eliding differences in media, treating everything from fashion<br />
to fascism as a semiotic system. Perhaps now, after the<br />
linguistic turn has yielded so many important insights, it is<br />
time to turn again to a careful consideration of what difference<br />
the medium makes.</p>
<p>3. In calling for medium-specific analysis, I do not mean to<br />
suggest that media should be considered in isolation from one<br />
another. Quite the contrary. As Jay David Bolter and Richard<br />
Grusin have shown in Remediation, media constantly engage in a<br />
recursive dynamic of imitating each other, incorporating aspects<br />
of competing media into themselves while simultaneously<br />
flaunting the advantages their own forms of mediation offer.<br />
Voyager&#8217;s now-defunct line of &#8220;Expanded Books,&#8221; for example,<br />
went to the extreme of offering readers an option that made the<br />
page as it was imaged on screen appear dog-eared. Another<br />
function inserted a paper clip at the top of the screenic page,<br />
which itself was programmed to look as much as possible like<br />
print. On the other side of the screen, many print texts are now<br />
imitating electronic hypertexts. These range from DeLillo&#8217;s<br />
Underworld to Bolter and Grusin&#8217;s Remediation, which<br />
self-consciously pushes the book form toward hypertext through<br />
arrows that serve as visual indications of hypertextual links.<br />
Media-specific analysis attends both to the specificity of the<br />
form&#8211;the fact that the Voyager paper clip is an image rather<br />
than a piece of bent metal&#8211;and to citations and imitations of<br />
one medium in another. Attuned not so much to similarity and<br />
difference as to simulation and instantiation, media-specific<br />
analysis (MSA) moves from the language of &#8220;text&#8221; to a more<br />
precise vocabulary of screen and page, digital program and<br />
analogue interface, code and ink, mutable image and durably<br />
inscribed mark, texton and scripton, computer and book.</p>
<p>4. In the spirit of MSA, I propose the following game. Using only<br />
the characteristics of the digital computer, what is it possible<br />
to say about electronic hypertext as a literary medium? The<br />
point of this game is to disallow all references to the content<br />
or operation of electronic hypertexts, although naturally these<br />
would be important in any full-scale literary analysis.<br />
Restricting ourselves to the medium alone, how far is it<br />
possible to go? This kind of analysis is artificial in that it<br />
deliberately forbids itself access to the full repertoire of<br />
literary reading strategies, but it may nevertheless prove<br />
illuminating about what difference the medium makes. Following<br />
these rules, I am able to score the following eight points.</p>
<p>5. Point One: Electronic Hypertexts Are Dynamic Images. In the<br />
computer the signifier exists not as a durably inscribed flat<br />
mark but as a screenic image produced by layers of code<br />
precisely correlated through correspondence rules. Even when<br />
electronic hypertexts simulate the appearance of durably<br />
inscribed marks, they are transitory images that need to be<br />
constantly refreshed to give the illusion of stable endurance<br />
through time.</p>
<p>6. Point Two: Electronic Hypertexts Include Both Analogue<br />
Resemblance and Digital Coding. The digital computer is not,<br />
strictly speaking, entirely digital. At the most basic level of<br />
the computer are electronic polarities, which are related to the<br />
bit stream through the analogue correspondence of morphological<br />
resemblance. Higher levels of code use digital correspondence,<br />
for example in the rules that correlate the compiler language<br />
with a programming language like C++ or Lisp. Analogue<br />
resemblance typically reappears at the top level of the screenic<br />
image, for example in the desktop icon of a trash barrel. Thus<br />
digital computers have an Oreo-like structure with an analogue<br />
bottom, a frothy digital middle, and an analogue top.[3]</p>
<p>7. Point Three: Electronic Hypertexts Are Generated Through<br />
Fragmentation and Recombination. As a result of the frothy<br />
digital middle of the computer&#8217;s structure, fragmentation and<br />
recombination are intrinsic to the medium. These textual<br />
strategies can of course also be used in print texts, for<br />
example in Raymond Queneau&#8217;s Cent mille milliards de poemes. But<br />
unlike print, digital texts cannot escape fragmentation, which<br />
is deeper, more pervasive, and more extreme than with the<br />
alphanumeric characters of print.</p>
<p>8. Point Four: Electronic Hypertexts Have Depth and Operate in<br />
Three Dimensions. Digital coding and analogue resemblance each<br />
have specific advantages. Analogue resemblance allows<br />
information to be translated between two differently embodied<br />
material instantiations, as when a sound wave is translated into<br />
the motion of a vibrating diaphragm of a microphone. Whenever<br />
two material entities interact, analogue resemblance is likely<br />
to come into play because it allows one form of continuously<br />
varying information to be translated into a similarly shaped<br />
informational pattern in another medium. Once this translation<br />
has taken place, digital coding is used to transform the<br />
continuity of morphological form into numbers (or other discrete<br />
codes). Intrinsic to this process is the transformation of a<br />
continuous shape into a series of code markers. In contrast to<br />
the continuity of analogue pattern, the discreteness of code<br />
enables the rapid manipulation and transmission of information.<br />
Human readers, with sensory capabilities evolved through eons of<br />
interacting with three-dimensional environments, are much better<br />
at perceiving patterns in analogue shapes than performing rapid<br />
calculations with numbers. When presented with code, humans tend<br />
to push toward perceiving it as analogue pattern. Although most<br />
of us learned to read using the digital method of sounding out<br />
each letter, for example, we soon began to recognize the shape<br />
of words and phrases, thus modulating the discreteness of<br />
alphabetic writing with the analogue continuity of pattern<br />
recognition. The interplay between analogue and digital takes<br />
place in a different way with screenic text than with print, and<br />
these differences turn out to be important for human perception.<br />
With present-day screens, reading speed on screen is typically<br />
about one-sixth that with print. Although the factors causing<br />
this difference are not well understood, they undoubtedly have<br />
something to do with the dynamic nature of screen images. Text<br />
on screen is produced through complex internal processes that<br />
make every word also a dynamic image, every discrete letter a<br />
continuous process.</p>
<p>9. To distinguish between the image the user sees and the strings<br />
as they exist in the text, Espen Aarseth has proposed the<br />
terminology scripton and texton (62ff.). In a digital computer<br />
texton could refer to voltages, strings of binary code, or<br />
programming code, depending on who the &#8220;reader&#8221; is taken to be.<br />
Scriptons would always include the screen image but could also<br />
include any code visible to a user who was able to access<br />
different layers of code. Textons can appear in print as well as<br />
electronic media. Stipple engraving, although it is normally<br />
perceived by the reader as a continuous image, operates through<br />
the binary digital distinction of ink dot/no ink dot; here the<br />
scripton is the image and the ink dots are the textons.[4] In<br />
electronic media textons and scriptons operate in a vertical<br />
hierarchy rather than through the flat microscale/macroscale<br />
play of stipple engraving. With electronic texts there is a<br />
clear distinction between scriptons that appear on screen and<br />
the textons of underlying code, which normally remain invisible<br />
to the casual user. This difference between print and screenic<br />
text can be summarized by saying that print is flat and code is<br />
deep. A corollary is that the flat page of print remains<br />
visually and kinesthetically accessible to the user,[5] whereas<br />
the textons of electronic texts can be brought into view only by<br />
using special techniques and software.</p>
<p>10. Point Five: Electronic Hypertexts Are Mutable and Transformable.<br />
The multiple coding levels of electronic textons allow small<br />
changes at one level of code to be quickly magnified into large<br />
changes at another level. The layered coding levels thus act<br />
like linguistic levers, giving a single keystroke the power to<br />
change the entire appearance of a textual image. An intrinsic<br />
component of this leveraging power is the ability of digital<br />
code to be fragmented and recombined. Although the text appears<br />
as a stable image on screen, it achieves its dynamic power of<br />
mutation and transformation through digital fragmentation and<br />
recombination. In addition, the rapid processing of digital code<br />
allows programs to create the illusion of depth in screenic<br />
images, for example in the three-dimensional landscapes of Myst<br />
or in the layered windows of Microsoft Word. Thus both scriptons<br />
and textons are perceived as having depth, with textons<br />
operating digitally through coding levels and scriptons<br />
operating analogically through screenic representation of<br />
three-dimensional spaces.</p>
<p>11. Point Six: Electronic Hypertexts Are Spaces to Navigate.<br />
Electronic hypertexts are navigable in at least two senses. They<br />
present to the user a visual interface which must be navigated<br />
through choices the user makes to progress through the<br />
hypertext; and they are encoded on multiple levels that the user<br />
can access using the appropriate software, for example by<br />
viewing the source code of a network browser as well as the<br />
surface text. As a result of its construction as a navigable<br />
space, electronic hypertext is intrinsically more involved with<br />
issues of mapping and navigation than are most print texts.</p>
<p>12. Point Seven: Electronic Hypertexts Are Written and Read in<br />
Distributed Cognitive Environments. Modern-day computers perform<br />
cognitively sophisticated acts when they collaborate with human<br />
users to create electronic hypertexts. These frequently include<br />
acts of interpretation, as when the computer decides how to<br />
display text in a browser independent of choices the user makes.<br />
It is no longer a question of whether computers are intelligent.<br />
Any cognizer which can perform the acts of evaluation, judgment,<br />
synthesis, and analysis exhibited by expert systems and<br />
autonomous agent software programs should prima facie be<br />
considered intelligent. Of course books also create rich<br />
cognitive environments, but they passively embody the cognitions<br />
of writer, reader, and book designer rather than actively<br />
participate in cognition themselves. To say that the computer is<br />
an active cognizer does not necessarily mean it is superior to<br />
the book as a writing technology. Keeping the book as a passive<br />
device for external memory storage and retrieval has striking<br />
advantages, for it allows the book to possess a robustness and<br />
reliability beyond the wildest dreams of a software designer.<br />
Whereas computers struggle to remain viable for a decade, books<br />
maintain backward compatibility for hundreds of years. The issue<br />
is not the technological superiority of either medium but rather<br />
the specific conditions a medium instantiates and enacts. When<br />
we read electronic hypertexts, we do so in environments that<br />
include the computer as an active cognizer performing<br />
sophisticated acts of interpretation and representation. Thus<br />
cognition is distributed not only between writer, reader, and<br />
designer (who may or may not be separate people) but also<br />
between humans and machines (which may or may not be regarded as<br />
separate entities).</p>
<p>13. Point Eight: Electronic Hypertexts Initiate and Demand Cyborg<br />
Reading Practices. Because electronic hypertexts are written and<br />
read in distributed cognitive environments, the reader<br />
necessarily is constructed as a cyborg, spliced into an<br />
integrated circuit with one or more intelligent machines. To be<br />
positioned as a cyborg is inevitably in some sense to become a<br />
cyborg, so electronic hypertexts, regardless of their content,<br />
tend toward cyborg subjectivity. Although this subject position<br />
may also be evoked through the content of print texts,<br />
electronic hypertexts necessarily enact it through the<br />
specificity of the medium.</p>
<p>14. In articulating these eight points, I do not mean to argue for<br />
the superiority of electronic media. Rather, I am concerned to<br />
delineate characteristics of digital environments that writers<br />
and readers can use as resources in creating literature and<br />
responding to it in sophisticated, playful ways. In much the<br />
same way that artists&#8217; books both reinforce and challenge the<br />
conventions of the book, so electronic texts can variously<br />
reinforce the characteristics of the medium or work against them<br />
by creating representations that mask their operation, as<br />
Voyager does with its Expanded Books. In either case the<br />
specificity of the medium comes into play as its characteristics<br />
are flaunted, suppressed, subverted. Whatever strategies are<br />
adopted, they take place within a cultural tradition where print<br />
books have been the dominant literary medium for hundreds of<br />
years, so it can be expected that electronic literature will use<br />
the awesome simulation powers of the computer to mimic print<br />
books as well as to insist on its own novelty, in the recursive<br />
looping of medial ecology that Bolter and Grusin call<br />
remediation.</p>
<p>15. To show how the eight points discussed above can be mobilized in<br />
a reading of an electronic hypertext, I will discuss Shelley<br />
Jackson&#8217;s brilliantly realized hypertext Patchwork Girl, an<br />
electronic fiction that manages to be at once highly original<br />
and intensely parasitic on its print predecessors. I have chosen<br />
Patchwork Girl for my tutor text not only because I think it is<br />
one of the best of the new electronic fictions, but also because<br />
it is deeply concerned with the prospect hinted at in Points<br />
Seven and Eight, that a new medium will enact and express a new<br />
kind of subjectivity. To measure the difference between the<br />
subjectivity envisioned in Patchwork Girl and that associated<br />
with the late eighteenth- and nineteenth-century texts it<br />
parasitizes, I will find it useful to return to the eighteenth<br />
century, when a constellation of economic, class, and literary<br />
interests clashed over defining the nature of literary property.<br />
Although the decisions that emerged from the ensuing legal<br />
battles were no sooner formulated than they were again contested<br />
in legal and literary arenas, the debate is nevertheless useful<br />
as a foil to Jackson&#8217;s work, which positions itself against the<br />
subjectivity associated with this moment in the print tradition.</p>
<p>Text as Vapor</p>
<p>16. In his important book Authors and Owners: The Invention of<br />
Copyright, Mark Rose shows that copyright did more than provide<br />
a legal basis for intellectual property. The discussions that<br />
swirled around copyright also solidified assumptions about what<br />
counted as creativity, authorship, and proper literature. One of<br />
the important assumptions that emerged out of this debate was<br />
the assertion that the literary work does not consist of paper,<br />
binding, or ink. Rather, the work was seen as an immaterial<br />
mental construct. Here is Blackstone&#8217;s assessment: &#8220;Style and<br />
sentiment are the essentials of a literary composition. These<br />
alone constitute its identity. The paper and print are merely<br />
accidents, which serve as vehicles to convey that style and<br />
sentiment to a distance&#8221; (qtd. in Rose 89). The abstraction of<br />
the literary work from its physical basis had the effect of<br />
obscuring the work&#8217;s relation to the economic network of<br />
booksellers who purchased shares in the work and used their<br />
economic capital to produce books. The more abstract the work<br />
became, the further removed it was from the commodification<br />
inherent in book sales, and consequently the more exalted the<br />
cultural status that could be claimed for it. Cultural capital<br />
was maximized by suppressing the relation between cultural and<br />
economic capital, although it was primarily economic capital<br />
that stimulated the booksellers&#8217;s interest in promoting literary<br />
works as immaterial works of art. As a result of these<br />
representations, literary works operated somewhat like Platonic<br />
forms achieving perfection because they were not sullied by the<br />
noise of embodiment.</p>
<p>17. Although Rose does not develop the gender implications of an<br />
evaluation that places abstraction above embodiment, his<br />
examples reveal that men producing these discourses had<br />
specifically in mind the male writer, whose creative masculine<br />
spirit gave rise to works of genius that soared above their<br />
material instantiations in books. Thus a hierarchy of values<br />
emerged which placed at the ascendant end of the scale the<br />
disembodied, the creative, the masculine, and the writer who<br />
worked for glory; at the lower end of the scale were the<br />
embodied, the repetitive, the feminine, and the writer who<br />
worked for money.</p>
<p>18. Rose traces a series of developments that progressively<br />
abstracted the work further away from its material<br />
instantiation, only to re-embody it in purer, more transcendent<br />
form. Although Blackstone located the work both in &#8220;style&#8221; and<br />
&#8220;sentiment,&#8221; subsequent commentators realized that the part of<br />
the work that could be secured as private intellectual property,<br />
and therefore the part appropriate for copyright protection, was<br />
the way ideas were expressed rather the ideas themselves. This<br />
aspect&#8211;&#8221;style&#8221; or &#8220;expression&#8221;&#8211;was frequently likened to<br />
clothes that dressed the thought. Through the clothes of<br />
expression, the body of the work entered into social legibility<br />
and was recognized as partaking in the social regulations that<br />
governed exchanges between free men who could hold private<br />
property. As Rose makes clear, it was the author&#8217;s style&#8211;the<br />
clothes he selected to dress his thought&#8211;that was considered<br />
most indicative of his individual personality, so style was also<br />
associated with the originality that was rapidly becoming the<br />
touchstone of literary value. These interrelations were further<br />
extended through metaphors that identified the style with the<br />
author&#8217;s face. Note that it was the face and not the body. Not<br />
only was the body hidden by clothes; more significantly, the<br />
body was not recognized as a proper site in which the author&#8217;s<br />
unique identity could be located. The final move was to<br />
reconstitute the author from the &#8220;face&#8221; exhibited in the style<br />
of his works, but by now bodies of all sorts had been left so<br />
far behind that critics felt free to attach this ethereal,<br />
non-corporeal face to any appropriate subject. (The prime<br />
example was the detachment of &#8220;Shakespeare&#8221; from the historical<br />
actor and playwright and the reassignment of his &#8220;face&#8221; to such<br />
august personages as Francis Bacon.) As Rose observes, these<br />
developments operated as a chain of deferrals sliding from the<br />
embodied to the disembodied, the book to the work, the content<br />
to the style, the style to the face, the face to the author&#8217;s<br />
personality, the personality to the author&#8217;s unique genius. The<br />
purpose of these deferrals, he suggests, was to arrive at a<br />
transcendental signifier that would guarantee the enduring value<br />
of the work as a literary property, establishing it as a &#8220;vast<br />
estate&#8221; that could be passed down through generations without<br />
diminishing in value.</p>
<p>19. In the process, certain metaphoric networks were established<br />
that continued to guide thinking about literary properties long<br />
after the court cases were settled. Perhaps the most important<br />
were metaphors equating the work with real estate. The idea that<br />
a literary work is analogous to real estate facilitated the<br />
fitting together of arguments about copyright with the Lockean<br />
liberal philosophy that C. P. Macpherson has labeled possessive<br />
individualism. Rose finds it appropriate that James Thomson&#8217;s<br />
long landscape poem The Seasons became the occasion for a major<br />
copyright case, for it was read as a poet transforming the<br />
landscape into his private literary property by mixing with it<br />
his imagination, just as the Lockean man who owns his person<br />
first and foremost creates private property by mixing it with<br />
his labor (Rose 113). Whereas the landholder supplies physical<br />
labor, the author supplies mental labor, particularly the<br />
originality of his unique &#8220;style.&#8221; Rose makes the connection<br />
clear: &#8220;The Lockean discourse of property, let us note, was<br />
founded on a compatible principle&#8211;&#8217;Every Man has a Property in<br />
his own Person&#8217; was Locke&#8217;s primary axiom&#8211;and thus the<br />
discourse of originality also readily blended with the<br />
eighteenth-century discourse of property&#8221; (121).</p>
<p>20. We have to go no further than Macpherson to realize, as he<br />
pointed out years ago, that there is implicit in Locke a<br />
chicken-and-egg problem. Whereas Locke presents his narrative as<br />
if market relations arose as a consequence of the creation of<br />
private property, it is clear that the discourse of possessive<br />
individualism is permeated through and through by market<br />
relations from the beginning. Only in a society where market<br />
relations were predominant would an argument defining the<br />
individual in terms of his ability to possess himself be found<br />
persuasive. The same kind of chicken-and-egg problem inheres in<br />
the notion of literary property. The author creates his literary<br />
property through the exercise of his original genius, yet it is<br />
clear that writing is always a matter of appropriation and<br />
transformation, from syntax to literary allusions and the<br />
structure of tropes. A literary tradition must precede an<br />
author&#8217;s inscriptions for literature to be possible as such, yet<br />
this same appropriation and re-working of an existing tradition<br />
is said to produce &#8220;original&#8221; work. If arguments about literary<br />
property were found persuasive in part because they fitted so<br />
well together with prevailing notions of liberal subjectivity,<br />
that same fit implied that certain common blindnesses were also<br />
shared.</p>
<p>21. In particular, anxiety about admitting that writing was a<br />
commercial enterprise haunted many of the defenders of literary<br />
properties. In a fine image, Rose remarks that &#8220;the sense of the<br />
commercial is, as it were, the unconscious of the text&#8221; for such<br />
defenders of literary property as Samuel Johnson and Edward<br />
Young (118). There were other suppressions as well. The erasure<br />
of the economic networks that produced the books went along with<br />
the erasure of the technologies of production, a tradition that<br />
continued beyond print technologies to other media, and beyond<br />
Britain to other countries. Rose recounts, for example, the<br />
landmark case in the U.S., Burrow-Giles Lithographic Co. v.<br />
Sarony (1884), in which the court decided that the photograph<br />
derived entirely from the photographer&#8217;s &#8220;&#8216;original mental<br />
conception&#8217;&#8221; and thus owed nothing to the camera that produced<br />
it (cited in Rose 135). The decision clearly relied on the<br />
notion of the author&#8217;s &#8220;originality&#8221; as a key component of an<br />
artistic work. The commitment to originality led to especially<br />
strained interpretations when the work was collaborative, for<br />
&#8220;originality&#8221; implied that the work resulted from the unique<br />
vision of one gifted individual, not from the joint efforts of a<br />
team of skilled craftsmen. Thus the legal fiction was invented<br />
that allowed an organization to become the &#8220;author,&#8221; a fiction<br />
that to this day is routinely invoked for films in which<br />
hundreds of cultural workers may be involved in the<br />
production.[6]</p>
<p>22. The patchwork quality of these legal fictions indicates how<br />
fragile was the consensus hammered out in the eighteenth<br />
century. Over subsequent decades and centuries it was challenged<br />
repeatedly in court. It was also challenged through artistic<br />
productions that sought to wrench the idea of the writer away<br />
from the transcendent ideal of the autonomous creator, from the<br />
automatic writing of the Surrealists to the theoretical<br />
arguments of Michel Foucault in his famous essay &#8220;What Is An<br />
Author?&#8221; Patchwork Girl contributes to these on-going<br />
contestations by exploiting the specificities of the digital<br />
medium to envision a very different kind of subjectivity than<br />
that which emerged in eighteenth-century legal battles over<br />
copyright. Those aspects of textual production suppressed in the<br />
eighteenth century to make the literary work an immaterial<br />
intellectual property&#8211;the materiality of the medium, the print<br />
technologies and economic networks that produced the work as a<br />
commodity, the collaborative nature of many literary works, the<br />
literary appropriations and transformations that were ignored or<br />
devalued in favor of &#8220;originality,&#8221; the slippage from book to<br />
work to style to face&#8211;form a citational substrata for Jackson&#8217;s<br />
fiction, which derives much of its energy from pushing against<br />
these assumptions. When Patchwork Girl foregrounds its<br />
appropriation of eighteenth-century texts, the effect is not to<br />
reinscribe earlier assumptions but to bring into view what was<br />
suppressed to create the literary work as intellectual property.<br />
In Patchwork Girl, the unconscious of eighteenth-century texts<br />
becomes the ground and surface for the specificity of this<br />
electronic text, which delights in pointing out that it was<br />
created not by a fetishized unique imagination but by many<br />
actors working in collaboration, including the &#8220;vaporous<br />
machinery&#8221; that no longer disappears behind a vaporous text.</p>
<p>Performing Originality through Reinscription</p>
<p>23. Patchwork Girl&#8217;s emphasis on appropriation and transformation<br />
begins with the main character, who is reassembled from the<br />
female monster in Mary Shelley&#8217;s Frankenstein. Recall that in<br />
Frankenstein the male creature, having been abandoned on the<br />
night of his creation and learned through hard experience that<br />
humankind finds him repulsive, returns to beg Frankenstein to<br />
create a mate for him, threatening dire revenge if he does not.<br />
Frankenstein agrees and assembles a female monster, but before<br />
animating her, he is struck with horror at the sight of her body<br />
and the prospect that she and the monster will have sex and<br />
reproduce. While the monster watches howling at the window,<br />
Frankenstein tears the female monster to bits. In Shelley<br />
Jackson&#8217;s text the female monster reappears, put together again<br />
by Mary Shelley. Like the female monster&#8217;s body, the body of<br />
this hypertext is also seamed and ruptured, comprised of<br />
disparate parts with extensive links between them. The main<br />
components of the hypertextual corpus are &#8220;body of text,&#8221;<br />
containing the female monster&#8217;s narration and theoretical<br />
speculations on hypertextual and human bodies; &#8220;graveyard,&#8221;<br />
where the stories of the creatures whose parts were used to make<br />
the female monster are told; &#8220;story,&#8221; in which are inscribed<br />
excerpts from the relevant passages in Frankenstein along with<br />
the monster&#8217;s later adventures; &#8220;journal,&#8221; the putative journal<br />
of Mary Shelley, where she records her interactions with the<br />
female monster; and &#8220;crazy quilt,&#8221; a section containing excerpts<br />
from Frank Baum&#8217;s Patchwork Girl of Oz, as well as<br />
reinscriptions from other parts of the text.[7]</p>
<p>24. From the hypertext links and metaphoric connections between<br />
these parts, a vivid picture emerges that radically alters the<br />
eighteenth-century view of the subject as an individual with a<br />
unique personality and the Lockean ability to possess his own<br />
person. For the female monster, it is mere common sense to say<br />
that multiple subjectivities inhabit the same body, for the<br />
different creatures from whose parts she is made retain their<br />
distinctive personalities, making her an assemblage rather than<br />
a unified self. Her intestines, for example, are taken from<br />
Mistress Anne, a demure woman who prided herself on her<br />
regularity. The monster&#8217;s large size required additional<br />
footage, so Bossy the cow contributed, too. Bossy is as<br />
explosive as Mistress Anne is discreet, leading to expulsions<br />
that pain Mistress Anne, who feels she must take responsibility<br />
for them. The conflict highlights the monster&#8217;s nature as a<br />
collection of disparate parts. Each part has its story, and each<br />
story constructs a different subjectivity. What is true for the<br />
monster is also true for us, Jackson suggests in her article<br />
&#8220;Stitch Bitch: the Patchwork Girl.&#8221; &#8220;The body is a patchwork,&#8221;<br />
Jackson remarks, &#8220;though the stitches might not show. It&#8217;s run<br />
by committee, a loose aggregate of entities we can&#8217;t really call<br />
human, but which have what look like lives of a sort&#8230; [These<br />
parts] are certainly not what we think of as objects, nor are<br />
they simple appendages, directly responsible to the brain&#8221;<br />
(527).</p>
<p>25. The distributed nature of the monster&#8217;s subjectivity&#8211;and<br />
implicitly ours as well&#8211;is further performed in the opening<br />
graphic. Even before the title page appears, an image comes up<br />
entitled &#8220;her,&#8221; displaying a woman&#8217;s body against a black<br />
ground. Traversing the body are multiple dotted lines, as if the<br />
body were a crazy quilt of scars or seams; retrospectively the<br />
reader can identify this image as representing the female<br />
monster&#8217;s patched body, among other possible referents. Cutting<br />
diagonally across the ground of this image is a dotted line, the<br />
first performance of a concept central to this hypertext. As the<br />
reader progresses further into the text, a map view of the<br />
different parts opens up, displayed in the Storyspace software<br />
(in which the text is written) as colored rectangles which, when<br />
clicked, contain smaller rectangles representing paragraph-sized<br />
blocks of text or lexias. The lexia &#8220;dotted line&#8221; explicates the<br />
significance of this image. &#8220;The dotted line is the best line,&#8221;<br />
this lexia proclaims, because the dotted line allows difference<br />
without &#8220;cleaving apart for good what it distinguishes&#8221; (body of<br />
text/dotted line). Hovering between separation and connection,<br />
the dotted lines marks the monster&#8217;s affinities with the human<br />
as well as her differences from other people.</p>
<p>26. The dotted line is also significant because it suggests that the<br />
image can move from two to three dimensions, as in a fold-up<br />
that lets &#8220;pages become tunnels or towers, hats or airplanes&#8221;<br />
(body of text/dotted line). The movement out of the flat plane<br />
evokes the hypertext&#8217;s stacks, which suggest through their<br />
placement a three-dimensional depth to the screen and a<br />
corresponding ability to emerge from the depths or recede into<br />
them. The text mobilizes the specificity of the technology by<br />
incorporating the three-dimensionality of linked windows as a<br />
central metaphor for the fiction&#8217;s own operations. Like the<br />
hypertext stacks, the monster will not be content to reside<br />
quiescent on the page, moving fluidly between the world<br />
represented on the pages of Mary Shelley&#8217;s text and the<br />
three-dimensional world in which Mary Shelley lives as she<br />
writes this text. Lying on a plane but also suggesting a fold<br />
upward, the dotted line becomes itself a kind of join or scar<br />
that marks the merging of fiction and metafiction in a narrative<br />
strategy that Gerard Genette has called metalepsis, the merging<br />
of diegetic levels that normally would be kept distinct.[8] It<br />
signals the dangerous potential of the monstrous text/body to<br />
disrupt traditional boundaries in a border war where the stakes<br />
are human identity.</p>
<p>27. In hypertext fashion, let us now click back to &#8220;her,&#8221; the<br />
opening graphic, and explore some of the other links radiating<br />
out from this lexia. Linked to &#8220;her&#8221; is &#8220;phrenology,&#8221; a graphic<br />
that further performs the metaphoric overlay of body and text.<br />
Showing a massive head in profile, &#8220;phrenology&#8221; displays the<br />
brain partitioned by lines into a crazy quilt of women&#8217;s names<br />
and enigmatic phrases. When we click on the names, we are taken<br />
to lexias telling the women&#8217;s stories from whose parts the<br />
monster was assembled; clicking on the phrases takes us to<br />
lexias that meditate on the nature of &#8220;her&#8221; multiple<br />
subjectivities. Thus we enter these textual blocks through a<br />
bodily image, implying that the text lies within the represented<br />
body. This dynamic inverts the usual perception the reader has<br />
with print fiction, that the represented bodies lie within the<br />
book. In print fiction, the book as physical object often seems<br />
to fade away as the reader&#8217;s imagination re-creates the vaporous<br />
world of the text, so that reading becomes, as Friedrich Kittler<br />
puts it, a kind of hallucination. The bodies populating the<br />
fictional world seem therefore to be figments of the reader&#8217;s<br />
imagination. First comes the immaterial mind, then from it issue<br />
impressions of physical beings. Here, however, the body is<br />
figured not as the product of the immaterial work but a portal<br />
to it, thus inverting the usual hierarchy that puts mind first.<br />
Moreover, the partitioning of the head, significantly seen in<br />
profile so it functions more like a body part than a face<br />
delineating a unique identity, emphasizes the multiple,<br />
fragmented nature of the monster&#8217;s subjectivity. The body we<br />
think we have&#8211;coherent, unified, and solid&#8211;is not the body we<br />
actually are, Jackson claims in &#8220;Stitch Bitch.&#8221; Like the<br />
monster&#8217;s body, our corporeality, which she calls the &#8220;banished<br />
body,&#8221; is &#8220;a hybrid of thing and thought&#8230; Its public image,<br />
its face is a collage of stories, borrowed images,<br />
superstitions, fantasies. We have no idea what it &#8216;really&#8217; looks<br />
like&#8221; (523).</p>
<p>28. Although the monster&#8217;s embodiment as an assemblage may seem<br />
unique, Jackson employs several strategies to demonstrate that<br />
it is not nearly so unusual as it may appear. Drawing on the<br />
contemporary discourses of technoscience, the lexia &#8220;bio&#8221; points<br />
out that &#8220;the body as seen by the new biology is chimerical. The<br />
animal cell is seen to be a hybrid of bacterial species. Like<br />
that many-headed beast [the chimera], the microbeast of the<br />
animal cells combines into one entity, bacteria that were<br />
originally freely living, self sufficient and metabolically<br />
distinct&#8221; (body of text/bio). In this view, the &#8220;normal&#8221; person<br />
is already an assemblage, designed so by evolutionary forces<br />
that make Frankenstein appear by comparison an upstart amateur.<br />
Other perspectives yield the same conclusion. Boundaries between<br />
self and other are no more secure than those between plant,<br />
animal, and human. &#8220;Keep in mind,&#8221; the monster warns us in &#8220;hazy<br />
whole,&#8221; that &#8220;on the microscopic level, you are all clouds.<br />
There is no shrink-wrap preserving you from contamination: your<br />
skin is a permeable membrane&#8230; if you touch me, your flesh is<br />
mixed with mine, and if you pull away, you may take some of me<br />
with you, and leave a token behind&#8221; (body of text/hazy whole).<br />
The mind, Jackson writes in &#8220;Stitch Bitch,&#8221; &#8220;what zen calls<br />
monkey-mind and Bataille calls project, has an almost catatonic<br />
obsession with stasis, centrality, and unity.&#8221; The project of<br />
writing, and therefore of her writing most of all, is to<br />
&#8220;dismantle the project&#8221; (527).</p>
<p>29. Following this philosophy, the text not only normalizes the<br />
subject-as-assemblage but also presents the subject-as-unity as<br />
a grotesque impossibility. The narrator satirizes the unified<br />
subject by evoking visions of resurrection, when the body will<br />
be &#8220;restored to wholeness and perfection, even a perfection it<br />
never achieved in its original state&#8221; (body of<br />
text/resurrection). But how can this resurrection be performed?<br />
What about amputees who have had their limbs eaten by other<br />
creatures? Following medieval theology that held the resurrected<br />
body will &#8220;take its matter, if digested, from the animal&#8217;s own<br />
flesh,&#8221; the narrator imagines those parts re-forming themselves<br />
from the animals&#8217; bodies. The &#8220;ravens, the lions, the bears,<br />
fish and crocodiles&#8230; gang up along shorelines and other verges<br />
to proffer the hands, feet and heads that they are all<br />
simultaneously regurgitating whole&#8230; big toe scraping the roof<br />
of the mouth, tapping the teeth from the inside, seeming alive,<br />
wanting out&#8221; (body of text/resurrection/remade). Bizarre as this<br />
scenario is, it is not as strange as the problems entertained by<br />
medieval theologians trying to parcel everything out to its<br />
proper body. Some philosophers theorized that eaten human<br />
remains will be reconstituted from the &#8220;nonhuman stuff&#8221; the<br />
creature has eaten, a proposition that quickly becomes<br />
problematic, as the narrator points out: &#8220;But what (hypothesized<br />
Aquinas) about the case of a man who ate only human embryos who<br />
generated a child who ate only human embryos? If eaten matter<br />
rises in the one who possessed it first, this child will not<br />
rise at all. All its matter will rise elsewhere: either in the<br />
embryos its father ate&#8230; or in the embryos it ate&#8221; (body of<br />
text/resurrection/eaten). This fantastic scenario illustrates<br />
that trying to sort things out to achieve a unity (that never<br />
was) results in confusions worse than accepting the human<br />
condition as multiple, fragmented, chimerical.</p>
<p>30. As the unified subject is thus broken apart and reassembled as a<br />
multiplicity, the work also highlights the technologies that<br />
make the textual body itself a multiplicity. To explore this<br />
point, consider how information moves across the interface of<br />
the CRT screen compared to books. With print fiction, the reader<br />
decodes a durable script to create, in her mind, a picture of<br />
the verbally represented world. As we have seen, with an<br />
electronic text the encoding/decoding operations are distributed<br />
between the writer, computer, and reader. The writer encodes,<br />
but the reader does not simply decode what the writer has<br />
written. Rather, the computer decodes the encoded information,<br />
performs the indicated operations, and then re-encodes the<br />
information as flickering images on the screen. The<br />
transformation of the text from durable inscription into what I<br />
have elsewhere called a flickering signifier means that it is<br />
mutable in ways that print is not, and this mutability serves as<br />
a visible mark of the multiple levels of encoding/decoding<br />
intervening between user and text (Hayles, &#8220;Virtual Bodies&#8221;).<br />
Through its flickering nature, the text-as-image teaches the<br />
user that it is possible to bring about changes in the screenic<br />
text that would be impossible with print (changing fonts,<br />
colors, type sizes, formatting, etc.). Such changes imply that<br />
the body represented within the virtual space is always already<br />
mutated, joined through a flexible, multilayered interface with<br />
the reader&#8217;s body on the other side of the screen. As Jackson<br />
puts it in &#8220;Stitch Bitch,&#8221; &#8220;Boundaries of texts are like<br />
boundaries of bodies, and both stand in for the confusing and<br />
invisible boundary of the self&#8221; (535).</p>
<p>31. These implications become explicit in one of the opening<br />
graphics of Patchwork Girl, &#8220;hercut 4.&#8221; In this image the<br />
monster&#8217;s body, which was previously displayed with dotted lines<br />
traversing it, has now become completely dismembered, with limbs<br />
distributed into rectangular blocks defined by dotted lines,<br />
thus completing the body/text analogy by making the body parts<br />
visually similar to the hypertext lexias, connected to each<br />
other in the Storyspace display by lines representing hypertext<br />
links. In addition, the upper right-hand corner of the image<br />
looks as though it has been torn off, revealing text underneath.<br />
Although fragmentary, enough of the text is visible to allow the<br />
reader to make out that it is giving instructions on how to<br />
create links to &#8220;interconnect documents and make it easier to<br />
move from place to [word obscured].&#8221; Thus the text underlying<br />
the image points to the software program underlying the text, so<br />
the entire image functions as an evocation of the multilayered<br />
coding chains flexibly mutating across interfaces to create<br />
flickering signifiers.</p>
<p>32. Of course print texts are also dispersed, in the sense that they<br />
cite other texts at the same time they transform those citations<br />
by embedding them in new contexts, as Derrida among others has<br />
taught us. Moreover, print texts can engage in reflexive play at<br />
least as complex as anything in Patchwork Girl, as Michael<br />
Snow&#8217;s wonderful artist book Cover to Cover playfully<br />
demonstrates.[9] The specificity of an electronic hypertext like<br />
Patchwork Girl comes from the ways in which it mobilizes the<br />
resources of the medium to enact subjectivities distributed in<br />
flexible and mutating ways across author, text, interface, and<br />
reader. As we have seen, electronic text is less durable and<br />
more mutable than print, and the active interface is not only<br />
multilayered but itself capable of cognitively sophisticated<br />
acts. By exploiting these characteristics, the author (more<br />
precisely, the putative author) constructs the distinctions<br />
between author and character, reader and represented world, as<br />
permeable membranes that can be configured in a variety of ways.</p>
<p>33. In Patchwork Girl, one of the important metaphoric connections<br />
expressing this flickering connectivity is the play between<br />
sewing and writing. Within the narrative fiction of<br />
Frankenstein, the monster&#8217;s body is created when Frankenstein<br />
patches the body parts together; at the metafictional level,<br />
Mary Shelley creates this patching through her writing. Within<br />
Patchwork Girl, however, it is Mary Shelley (not Frankenstein)<br />
who assembles the monster, and this patching is specifically<br />
identified with the characteristically feminine work of sewing<br />
or quilting. The fact that this sewing takes place within the<br />
fiction makes Mary Shelley a character written by Shelley<br />
Jackson rather than an author who herself writes. This situation<br />
becomes more complex when Mary Shelley is shown both to sew and<br />
write the monster, further entangling fiction and metafiction.<br />
&#8220;I had made her, writing deep into the night by candlelight,&#8221;<br />
Mary Shelley narrates, &#8220;until the tiny black letters blurred<br />
into stitches and I began to feel that I was sewing a great<br />
quilt&#8221; (journal/written). This lexia is linked with &#8220;sewn&#8221;: &#8220;I<br />
had sewn her, stitching deep into the night by candlelight,<br />
until the tiny black stitches wavered into script and I began to<br />
feel that I was writing, that this creature I was assembling was<br />
a brash attempt to achieve by artificial means the unity of a<br />
life-form&#8221; (journal/sewn).</p>
<p>34. The feminine associations with sewing serve to mark this as a<br />
female&#8211;and feminist&#8211;production. Throughout, the relation<br />
between creature and creator in Patchwork Girl stands in<br />
implicit contrast to the relation between the male monster and<br />
Victor Frankenstein. Whereas Victor participates, often<br />
unconsciously, in a dynamic of abjection that results in tragedy<br />
for both creator and creature, in Patchwork Girl Mary feels<br />
attraction and sympathy rather than horror and denial. In<br />
contrast to Victor&#8217;s determination to gain preeminence as a<br />
great scientist, Mary&#8217;s acts of creation are hedged with<br />
qualifications that signal her awareness that she is not so much<br />
conquering the secrets of life and death as participating in<br />
forces greater than she. In &#8220;sewn,&#8221; the passage continues with<br />
Mary wondering whether the monster&#8217;s fragmented unity is<br />
&#8220;perhaps more rightfully given, not made; continuous, not<br />
interrupted; and subject to divine truth, not the will to<br />
expression of its prideful author. Authoress, I amend, smiling&#8221;<br />
(journal/sewn). The self-conscious placement of herself in an<br />
inferior position of &#8220;authoress&#8221; compared to the male<br />
author&#8211;surely in relation to her husband most of all&#8211;is<br />
connected in Jackson&#8217;s text with subtle suggestions that the<br />
monster and Mary share something Mary and her husband do not, an<br />
intimacy based on equality and female bonding rather than<br />
subservience and female inferiority. Although Mary confesses<br />
sometimes to feeling frightened of the female monster, she also<br />
feels compassionate and even erotic attraction toward her<br />
creation. Whereas Victor can see his monster only as a<br />
competitor whose strength and agility are understood as threats,<br />
Mary exults in the female monster&#8217;s physical strength,<br />
connecting it with the creature&#8217;s freedom from the stifling<br />
conventions of proper womanhood. When the female monster leaves<br />
her creator to pursue her own life and adventures, Mary, unlike<br />
Victor, takes vicarious delight in her creation&#8217;s ability to run<br />
wild and free.</p>
<p>35. In her comprehensive survey of the status of the body in the<br />
Western philosophic tradition, Elizabeth Grosz has shown that<br />
there is a persistent tendency to assign to women the burden of<br />
corporeality, leaving men free to imagine themselves as<br />
disembodied minds&#8211;an observation that has been familiar to<br />
feminists at least since Simone de Beauvoir. Even philosophers<br />
as sympathetic to embodiment as Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Mark<br />
Johnson are often blind to issues of gender, implicitly assuming<br />
the male body as the norm. The contrast between woman as<br />
embodied female and man as transcendent mind is everywhere at<br />
work in the comparison between Mary&#8217;s care for the female<br />
monster and Victor&#8217;s astonishing failure to anticipate any of<br />
the male creature&#8217;s corporeal needs, including the fact that<br />
making him seven feet tall might make it difficult for the<br />
monster to fit into human society. Whereas the disembodied text<br />
of the eighteenth-century work went along with a parallel and<br />
reinforcing notion of the author as a disembodied face, in<br />
Jackson&#8217;s text the emphasis on body and corporeality goes along<br />
with an embodied author and equally material text. &#8220;The banished<br />
body is not female, necessarily, but it is feminine,&#8221; Jackson<br />
remarks in &#8220;Stitch Bitch.&#8221; &#8220;That is, it is amorphous, indirect,<br />
impure, diffuse, multiple, evasive. So is what we learned to<br />
call bad writing. Good writing is direct, effective, clean as a<br />
bleached bone. Bad writing is all flesh, and dirty flesh at<br />
that&#8230; Hypertext is everything that for centuries has been<br />
damned by its association with the feminine&#8221; (534).</p>
<p>36. Reinforcing this emphasis on hypertext as &#8220;femininely&#8221; embodied<br />
are links that re-embody passages from Shelley&#8217;s text into<br />
contexts which subtly or extravagantly alter their meaning. A<br />
stunning example is the famous passage from the 1831 preface<br />
where Mary Shelley bids her &#8220;hideous progeny go forth and<br />
prosper&#8221; (qtd. in story/severance/hideous progeny). &#8220;I have an<br />
affection for it, for it was the offspring of happy days, when<br />
death and grief were but words which found no true echo in my<br />
heart. Its several pages speak of many a walk, many a drive, and<br />
many a conversation, when I was not alone; and my companion was<br />
one who, in this world, I shall never see more. But this is for<br />
myself; my readers have nothing to do with these associations&#8221;<br />
(qtd. in story/severance/hideous progeny). In the context of<br />
Frankenstein, &#8220;hideous progeny&#8221; can be understood as referring<br />
both to the text and to the male monster. As Anne Mellor points<br />
out, taking the text as the referent places Mary Shelley in the<br />
tradition of female writers of Gothic novels who were exposing<br />
the dark underside of British society. When the monster is taken<br />
as the referent, the passage suggests that Mary Shelley&#8217;s<br />
textual creature expresses the fear attending birth in an age of<br />
high mortality rates for women and infants&#8211;a fear that Shelley<br />
was to know intimately from wrenching personal experience.<br />
Moreover, in Barbara Johnson&#8217;s reading of Frankenstein, Shelley<br />
is also giving birth to herself as a writer in this text, so her<br />
authorship also becomes a &#8220;hideous progeny.&#8221; The rich<br />
ambiguities that inhere in the phrase make Jackson&#8217;s<br />
transformation of it all the more striking.</p>
<p>37. In Jackson&#8217;s work, the passage&#8217;s meaning is radically changed by<br />
&#8220;Thanks,&#8221; to which it is linked. In this lexia, the female<br />
monster says, &#8220;Thanks, Mary, for that kindness, however tinged<br />
with disgust. Hideous progeny: yes, I was both those things, for<br />
you, and more. Lover, friend, collaborator. It is my eyes you<br />
describe&#8211;with fear, yes, but with fascination: yellow, watery,<br />
but speculative eyes&#8221; (story/severance/hideous progeny/thanks).<br />
The linked passage changes the referent for &#8220;hideous progeny,&#8221;<br />
so that the female monster occupies the place previously held by<br />
the male creature, the text of Frankenstein, and Mary Shelly as<br />
writer. All these, the link implies, are now embedded as<br />
subtexts in the female monster, who herself is indistinguishable<br />
from the ruptured, seamed textual body that both contains her<br />
and is contained by her. &#8220;The hypertext is the banished body,&#8221;<br />
Jackson remarks in &#8220;Stitch Bitch.&#8221; &#8220;Its compositional principle<br />
is desire&#8221; (536). If desire is enacted by activating links, this<br />
linked text not only expresses the reader&#8217;s desire but also<br />
Mary&#8217;s desire for her monstrous creation. Its most<br />
subversive&#8211;and erotic&#8211;implication comes in changing the<br />
referent for the lost companion &#8220;who, in this world, I shall<br />
never see more.&#8221; Now it is not her husband whose loss Mary<br />
laments but the female monster&#8211;the &#8220;lover, friend,<br />
collaborator&#8221; without whom Patchwork Girl could not have been<br />
written.[10]</p>
<p>38. Among Patchwork Girl&#8217;s many subversions is its attack on the<br />
&#8220;originality&#8221; of the work. &#8220;In collage, writing is stripped of<br />
the pretense of originality,&#8221; Jackson writes in &#8220;Stitch Bitch.&#8221;<br />
&#8220;One can be surprised by what one has to say in the forced<br />
intercourse between texts or the recombinant potential in one<br />
text, by other words that mutter inside the proper names&#8221; (537).<br />
This muttering becomes discernible in Shelley Jackson&#8217;s playful<br />
linking of her name with Mary Shelley&#8217;s. The title page of<br />
Jackson&#8217;s work performs this distributed authorship, for it says<br />
Patchwork Girl is &#8220;by Mary/Shelley &#38; herself,&#8221; a designation<br />
that names Mary Shelley, Shelley Jackson, and the monster all as<br />
authors. (In a perhaps intentional irony, the Eastgate title<br />
page inscribes Jackson&#8217;s name below as the &#8220;authorized&#8221;<br />
signature, along with the usual warnings about copyright<br />
infringement, even though the entire thrust of Jackson&#8217;s text<br />
pushes against this view of a sole author who produces an<br />
original work.) Jackson&#8217;s subversions of her publisher&#8217;s<br />
proprietary claims continue in a section entitled &#8220;M/S,&#8221; a<br />
naming that invites us to read the slash as both dividing and<br />
connecting Mary Shelley and Shelley Jackson. When Jackson<br />
re-inscribes Shelley&#8217;s text into hers, the act is never merely a<br />
quotation, even when the referents are not violently wrenched<br />
away from the originals as in &#8220;Thanks&#8221;; witness the fact that<br />
Jackson divides Shelley&#8217;s text into lexias and encodes it into<br />
the Storyspace software. Rather, the citation of Shelley is a<br />
performative gesture indicating that the authorial function is<br />
distributed across both names, as the nominative they share<br />
between them would suggest (Mary Shelley/Shelley Jackson). In<br />
addition, the slash in M/S (ironically interjected into the MS<br />
which would signify the &#8220;original&#8221; material text in normal<br />
editorial notation) may also be read as signifying the computer<br />
interface connecting/dividing Mary Shelley, a character in<br />
Patchwork Girl, with Shelley Jackson, the author who sits at the<br />
keyboard typing the words that conflate Mary&#8217;s sewing and<br />
writing and so make &#8220;Shelley&#8221; into both character and writer.<br />
The computer thus also actively participates in the construction<br />
of these flickering signifiers in all their distributed, mutable<br />
complexity. &#8220;There is a kind of thinking without thinkers,&#8221; the<br />
narrator declares in &#8220;it thinks.&#8221;</p>
<p>Matter thinks. Language thinks. When we have business with<br />
language, we are possessed by its dreams and demons, we<br />
grow intimate with monsters. We become hybrids, chimeras,<br />
centaurs ourself: steaming flanks and solid redoubtable<br />
hoofs galloping under a vaporous machinery. (body of<br />
text/it thinks)</p>
<p>The surface of the text-as-image may look solid, this passage<br />
suggests, but the &#8220;vaporous machinery&#8221; generating it marks that<br />
solidity with the mutability and distributed cognition<br />
characteristic of flickering signifiers. Even the subject<br />
considered in itself is a site for distributed cognition,<br />
Jackson argues in &#8220;Stitch Bitch.&#8221; &#8220;Thinking is conducted by<br />
entities we don&#8217;t know, wouldn&#8217;t recognize on the street,&#8221;<br />
Jackson writes. &#8220;Call them yours if you want, but puff and blow<br />
all you want, you cannot make them stop their work one second to<br />
salute you&#8221; (527).</p>
<p>39. The trace of flickering signification is as pervasive and<br />
inescapable in this text as it is with the constantly refreshed<br />
CRT screen. In one of the fiction&#8217;s climactic scenes, Mary and<br />
the monster, having become lovers and grown physically intimate<br />
with each other&#8217;s bodies, decide to swap patches of skin. Each<br />
lifts a circle of skin from her leg, and Mary sews her flesh<br />
onto the monster, and the monster&#8217;s flesh onto her own human<br />
leg. This suturing of self onto other reveals more than a wish<br />
of lovers to join. Because Mary is the monster&#8217;s creator in a<br />
double sense, at once sewing and writing her, the scene<br />
functions as a crossroads for the traffic between fiction and<br />
metafiction, writer and character, the physical body existing<br />
outside the textual frame sutured together with representations<br />
of the body in virtual space. Throughout, the narrator has been<br />
at pains to point out the parallels between surgery and writing:<br />
&#8220;Surgery was the art of restoring and binding disjointed<br />
parts&#8230; Being &#8217;seam&#8217;d with scars&#8217; was both a fact of<br />
eighteenth-century life and a metaphor for dissonant<br />
interferences ruining any finely adjusted composition&#8221; (body of<br />
text/mixed up/seam&#8217;d). One of the sutures that reappears in<br />
several lexias is the &#8220;intertwisted&#8221; closing that &#8220;left needles<br />
sticking in the wounds&#8211;in manner of tailors&#8211;with thread<br />
wrapped around them&#8221; (body of text/mixed up/seam&#8217;d). Thus a<br />
metaphoric relay system is set up between surgery, particularly<br />
sutures using needle and thread, sewing, the seamed body, and<br />
writing.</p>
<p>40. Jackson uses this relay system of surgery/sewing/writing to set<br />
up an argument about &#8220;monstrous&#8221; writing that reverberates<br />
throughout the text. The narrator points out that &#8220;the<br />
comparison between a literary composition and the fitting<br />
together of the human body from various members stemmed from<br />
ancient rhetoric. Membrum or &#8216;limb&#8217; also signified &#8216;clause&#8217;&#8221;<br />
(body of text/typographical). As the narrator notes, this<br />
body/writing analogy allowed rhetoricians to conclude that<br />
writing was bad if it resembled a disproportioned or grotesque<br />
body. But the analogy was to go only so far; writing was not<br />
actually to become the body. Decorum dictated that the barrier<br />
between the book as physical object and text as immaterial work<br />
be maintained intact. Joseph Addison found any writing<br />
distasteful that was configured in the shape of the object it<br />
represented, such as George Herbert&#8217;s poem &#8220;Wings,&#8221; printed to<br />
resemble the shape of wings. The narrator remarks that Addison<br />
called this &#8220;visual turning of one set of terms into another&#8221;<br />
the &#8220;Anagram of a Man&#8221; and labeled it a classic example of<br />
&#8220;False Wit&#8221; (body of text/typographical). This aesthetic<br />
judgment is consistent with the assumption that the work is<br />
immaterial. Making the physical appearance of the text a<br />
signifying component was improper because it suggested the text<br />
could not be extracted from its physical form. According to this<br />
aesthetic, bodies can be represented within the text but the<br />
body of the text should not mix with these representations. To<br />
do so is to engage in what Russell and Whitehead would later<br />
call a category mistake&#8211;an ontological error that risks,<br />
through its enactment of hybridity, spawning monstrous bodies on<br />
both sides of the textual divide.</p>
<p>41. It is precisely such breaches of good taste and decorum that the<br />
monster embodies. Her body, &#8220;seam&#8217;d with scars,&#8221; becomes a<br />
metaphor for the ruptured, discontinuous space of the hypertext,<br />
which in its representations also flagrantly violates decorum by<br />
transgressively mixing fiction and metafiction in the same<br />
chaotic arena. When deciding what skin to swap, the monster,<br />
with Mary&#8217;s consent, significantly decides that &#8220;the nearest<br />
thing to a bit of my own flesh would be this scar, a place where<br />
disparate things are joined in a way that was my own&#8221;<br />
(story/severance/join). Comprised of parts taken from other<br />
textual bodies (Frankenstein and Frank Baum&#8217;s Patchwork Girl of<br />
Oz, among others), this hypertext, like the monster&#8217;s body,<br />
hints that it is most itself in the links and seams that join<br />
one part to another. &#8220;My real skeleton is made of scars,&#8221; the<br />
monster says in a passage that conflates body and text, &#8220;a web<br />
that traverses me in three dimensions. What holds me together is<br />
what marks my dispersal. I am most myself in the gaps between my<br />
parts&#8221; (body of text/dispersed). The reader inscribes her<br />
subjectivity into this text by choosing what links to activate,<br />
what scars to trace. Contrary to the dictates of good taste and<br />
good writing, the scars/links thus function to join the text<br />
with the corporeal body of the reader, which performs the<br />
enacted motions that bring the text into being as a sequential<br />
narrative. Because these enactions take place through the agency<br />
of the computer, all these bodies&#8211;the monster, Mary Shelley,<br />
Shelley Jackson, the specificity of the electronic text, the<br />
active agency of the digital interface, and we the readers&#8211;are<br />
made to participate in the mutating configurations of flickering<br />
signifiers.</p>
<p>42. As a result of these dotted-line connections/divisions, the text<br />
has a livelier sense of embodiment than is normally the case,<br />
and the bodies within the text are more densely coded with<br />
textuality. &#8220;I am a mixed metaphor,&#8221; the monstrous<br />
text/textualized monster declares. &#8220;Metaphor, meaning something<br />
like &#8216;bearing across,&#8217; is itself a fine metaphor for my<br />
condition. Every part of me is linked with other territories<br />
alien to it but equally mine. . . borrowed parts, annexed<br />
territories. I cannot be reduced, my metaphors are not<br />
tautologies, yet I am equally present in both poles of a pair,<br />
each end of the wire is tethered to one of my limbs. The<br />
metaphorical principle is my true skeleton&#8221; (body of<br />
text/metaphor me). The multilayered sense of &#8220;metaphor&#8221; here&#8211;a<br />
rhetorical trope of writing that is also a Storyspace link and a<br />
scar traversing the monster&#8217;s body&#8211;implies that the movement up<br />
and down fictional/metafictional levels is not limited to<br />
certain moments in the text but pervades the text as a whole,<br />
spreading along with (and becoming indistinguishable from) the<br />
&#8220;true skeleton&#8221; of the text/monster/software. In this fluid<br />
movement between bodies inside texts and texts inside bodies,<br />
inside is constantly becoming outside becoming inside, as if<br />
performing at the visible level of the text the linkages between<br />
different coding levels within the computer. The dynamic makes<br />
real for the user that each visible mark on the screen, in<br />
contrast to the flat mark of print, is linked with multiple<br />
coding levels whose dimensionalities can expand or contract as<br />
the coding commands require.</p>
<p>43. The dynamic inside/outside/inside is vividly, hauntingly<br />
represented in &#8220;body jungle,&#8221; in which the monster dreams<br />
herself inside a lush jungle landscape comprised of body parts:<br />
beating hearts &#8220;roost like pheasants on high bone branches&#8221;;<br />
&#8220;intestines hang in swags from ribs and pelvic crests, or pile<br />
up like tires at the ankles of legs become trees&#8221;; &#8220;ovaries hang<br />
like kumquats from delicate vines&#8221; (story/falling apart/body<br />
jungle). The monster imagines passing days and nights in the<br />
jungle: &#8220;In the morning the convoluted clouds will think about<br />
me. They will block my view of the domed sky, which I know will<br />
bear faint suture marks, the knit junctures between once-soft<br />
sectors of sky.&#8221; In time she supposes that her legs will be<br />
dissolved by the acid dripping form the overhanging stomachs:<br />
&#8220;My bony stumps will sink deep; I will shuffle forward until I<br />
tire, then stand still. I will place the end of a vein in my<br />
mouth and suck it. At last I will no longer bother to remove<br />
it&#8230; I do not know how my skull will open, or if I will still<br />
know myself when my brain drifts up to join the huge,<br />
intelligent sky.&#8221; In this vision she becomes a body part of some<br />
larger entity, perhaps the computer that thinks/dreams her, just<br />
as her parts were once autonomous entities who have now been<br />
incorporated into the larger whole/hole that she is. In<br />
hypertext fiction, Jackson remarks in &#8220;Stitch Bitch,&#8221; there are<br />
especially powerful opportunities to &#8220;sneak up on reality from<br />
inside fiction to turn around and look back on reality as a text<br />
embedded in a fictional universe&#8221; (534).</p>
<p>44. We can now see that the construction of multiple subjectivities<br />
in this text and the reconfiguration of consciousness to body<br />
are both deeply bound up with what I have been calling<br />
flickering signification, constituted through the fluidly<br />
mutating connections between writer, interface, and reader. It<br />
is not the hypertext structure that makes Patchwork Girl<br />
distinctively different from print books. As Dictionary of the<br />
Khazars has taught us (along with similar works), print texts<br />
may also have hypertext structures. Rather, Patchwork Girl could<br />
only be an electronic text because the trace of the computer<br />
interface, penetrating deeply into its signifying structures,<br />
does more than mark the visible surface of the text; it becomes<br />
incorporated into the textual body. Flickering signification,<br />
which in a literal and material sense can be understood as<br />
producing the text, is also produced by it as a textual effect.</p>
<p>45. It is primarily through the complex enactment of linking<br />
structures, both within the text and within the distributed<br />
cognitive environment in which the text is read, that Patchwork<br />
Girl brings into view what was suppressed in eighteenth-century<br />
debates over copyright. Instead of an immaterial work, this text<br />
foregrounds the materiality of fictional bodies, authorial<br />
bodies, readerly bodies, and the writing technologies that<br />
produce and connect them. Instead of valorizing originality, it<br />
produces itself and its characters through acts of appropriation<br />
and transformation that imply writing and subjectivity are<br />
always patchwork quilts of reinscription and innovation.<br />
Rejecting the notion of an author&#8217;s unique genius, it<br />
self-consciously insists on the collaborative nature of its<br />
productions, from the monster as assemblage to the distribution<br />
of authorship between the monster &#8220;herself,&#8221; Mary Shelley,<br />
Shelley Jackson, the reader, the computer, and other more<br />
shadowy actors as well.</p>
<p>46. To complete the comparison between Patchwork Girl and the<br />
subjectivity implicit in eighteenth-century debates over<br />
copyright, let us now turn to the distinctions between style and<br />
idea, form and content, face and body that informed the<br />
invention of copyright. Although one could still talk about the<br />
&#8220;style&#8221; of Patchwork Girl, the text offers another set of terms<br />
in which to understand its complexities: the alternation between<br />
lexia and link, the screen of text that we are reading versus<br />
the &#8220;go to&#8221; computer command that constitutes the hypertextual<br />
link in electronic media. In Patchwork Girl this alternation is<br />
performed through a network of interrelated metaphors, including<br />
tissue and scar, body and skeleton, presence and gap. Underlying<br />
these terms is a more subtle association of link and lexia with<br />
simultaneity and sequence. The eighteenth-century trope of the<br />
text as real estate has obviously been complicated by the<br />
distributed technologies of cyberspace. When the print book<br />
becomes unbound in electronic media, time is affected as well.<br />
The chronotopes of electronic fictions function in profoundly<br />
different ways than the chronotopes of literary works conceived<br />
as books. Exploring this difference will open a window onto the<br />
connections that enfold the link and lexia together with<br />
sequence and simultaneity.</p>
<p>47. With many print books, the order of pages recapitulates the<br />
order of time in the lifeworld. Chronology might be complicated<br />
through flashbacks or flashforwards, but normally this is done<br />
in episodes that stretch for many pages. There are of course<br />
notable exceptions, for example Robert Coover&#8217;s print hypertext<br />
&#8220;The Babysitter.&#8221; Choosing not to notice such experimental print<br />
fictions, the narrator of Patchwork Girl remarks, &#8220;When I open a<br />
book I know where I am, which is restful. My reading is spatial<br />
and even volumetric. I tell myself, I am a third of the way down<br />
through a rectangular solid, I am a quarter of the way down the<br />
page, I am here on the page, here on this line, here, here,<br />
here&#8221; (body of text/this writing). In Patchwork Girl, like many<br />
hypertexts, chronology is inherently tenuous because linking<br />
structures leap across time as well as space. As if<br />
recapitulating the processes of fragmentation and recombination<br />
made possible by digital technologies, Patchwork Girl locates<br />
its performance of subjectivity in the individual lexia. Since<br />
the past and the future can be played out in any number of ways,<br />
the present moment, the lexia we are reading right now, carries<br />
an unusually intense sense of presence, all the more so because<br />
it is a smaller unit of narration than normally constitutes an<br />
episode. &#8220;I can&#8217;t say I enjoy it, exactly,&#8221; the narrator<br />
comments. &#8220;The present moment is furiously small, a slot, a<br />
notch, a footprint, and on either side it is a seethe of<br />
possibility, the dissolve of alphabets and of me&#8221; (body of<br />
text/a slot, a notch).</p>
<p>48. Sequence is constructed by accumulating a string of present<br />
moments when the reader clicks on links, as if selecting beads<br />
to string for a necklace. In contrast to this sequence is the<br />
simultaneity of the computer program. Within the non-Cartesian<br />
space of computer memory, all addresses are equidistant (within<br />
near and far memory, respectively), so all lexias are equally<br />
quick to respond to the click of the mouse (making allowance for<br />
those that load slower because they contain more data, usually<br />
images). This situation reverses our usual sense that time is<br />
passing as we watch. Instead, time becomes a river that always<br />
already exists in its entirety, and we create sequence and<br />
chronology by choosing which portions of the river to sample.<br />
There thus arises a tension between the sequence of lexias<br />
chosen by the reader, and the simultaneity of memory space in<br />
which all the lexias always already exist. The tension marks the<br />
difference between the narrator&#8217;s life as the reader experiences<br />
it, and that life as it exists in a space of potentiality in<br />
which &#8220;everything could have been different and already is&#8221;<br />
(story/rethinking/a life).</p>
<p>49. When the narrator-as-present-subject seeks for the &#8220;rest of my<br />
life,&#8221; therefore, the situation is not as simple as a unified<br />
subject seeking to foresee a future stretching in unbroken<br />
chronology before her. To find &#8220;the rest of my life,&#8221; the<br />
narrator must look not forward into the passing of time but<br />
downward into the computer space in which discrete lexias lie<br />
jumbled all together. &#8220;I sense a reluctance when I tow a frame<br />
forward into the view,&#8221; the narrator says in an utterance that<br />
conflates writer, reader, and character, as if reflecting within<br />
the jumble of fiction and metafiction the jumbled time<br />
represented by the lexias. &#8220;It is a child pulled out of a<br />
fantastic underground hideaway to answer a history quiz. Were<br />
you brought out of polymorphous dreams, in which mechanical<br />
contraptions, funnels, tubes and magnifying glasses mingled with<br />
animal attentions and crowd scenes, into a rigidly actual and<br />
bipolar sex scene? Don&#8217;t worry, little boxy baby, I will lift<br />
you by your ankles off the bed&#8230; I will show you the seductions<br />
of sequence, and then I will let the aperture close, I will let<br />
you fall back into the muddled bedsheets, into the merged<br />
molecular dance of simultaneity&#8221; (story/rest of my life).</p>
<p>50. The interjection of simultaneity into the sequence of a reader&#8217;s<br />
choices makes clear why different ontological levels (character,<br />
writer, reader) mingle so monstrously in this text. In the heart<br />
of the computer, which is to say at the deepest levels of<br />
machine code, the distinctions between character, writer, and<br />
reader are coded into strings of ones and zeros in a space where<br />
the text written by a human writer and a mouse click made by a<br />
human reader are coded in the same binary form as machine<br />
commands and computer programs. When the text represents this<br />
process (somewhat misleadingly) as a &#8220;merged molecular dance of<br />
simultaneity,&#8221; it mobilizes the specificity of the medium as an<br />
authorization for its own vision of cyborg subjectivity.</p>
<p>51. Part of the monstrosity, then, is this mingling of the<br />
subjectivity we attribute to characters, authors, and ourselves<br />
as readers, with the non-anthropomorphic actions of the computer<br />
program. This aspect of the text&#8217;s monstrous hybridity is most<br />
apparent in &#8220;Crazy Quilt,&#8221; where excerpts from Frank Baum&#8217;s The<br />
Patchwork Girl of Oz increasingly intermingle with other<br />
sections of the hypertext and with the instructions from the<br />
Storyspace manual. Typical is &#8220;seam&#8217;d,&#8221; a significantly named<br />
lexia that stitches together the surgery/sewing/writing<br />
metaphoric network established in other lexias with the<br />
Storyspace program: &#8220;You may emphasize the presence of text<br />
links by using a special style, color or typeface. Or, if you<br />
prefer, you can leave needles sticking in the wounds&#8211;in the<br />
manner of tailors&#8211;with thread wrapped around them. Being seam&#8217;d<br />
with scars was both a fact of eighteenth-century life and a<br />
metaphor for dissonant interferences ruining any finely adjusted<br />
composition&#8221; (crazy quilt/seam&#8217;d). The patchwork quality of the<br />
passage is emphasized by the fact that another lexia entitled<br />
&#8220;seam&#8217;d&#8221; appears elsewhere (body of text/mixed up/seam&#8217;d), from<br />
which some of the phrases cited above were lifted.</p>
<p>52. Although memory is equidistant within the computer, such is not<br />
the case for human readers. In our memories, events take place<br />
in time and therefore constitute sequence. The &#8220;seam&#8217;ed&#8221; lexia<br />
in &#8220;crazy quilt&#8221; relies for its effect on the probability that<br />
the reader has already seen the lexias of which this is a<br />
patchwork. Because we have read these lines in other contexts,<br />
they strike us now as a crazy quilt, a textual body stitched<br />
together from recycled pieces of other lexias and texts. Memory,<br />
then, converts simultaneity into sequence, and sequence into the<br />
continuity of a coherent past. But human memory, unlike computer<br />
memory, does not retain its contents indefinitely or even<br />
reliably. If human memory has gaps in it (a phenomenon<br />
alarmingly real to me as my salad days recede in the distance),<br />
then memory becomes like atoms full of empty space, an apparent<br />
continuity riddled with holes.</p>
<p>53. Fascinated with recovering that which has been lost, the<br />
narrator recalls a speech made by Susan B. Anthony at a &#8220;church<br />
quilting bee in Cleveland&#8221; in which the monster &#8220;was the<br />
featured attraction, the demon quilt&#8221; (body of text/mixed<br />
up/quilting). Anthony (or is it the monster?) remarks that &#8220;Our<br />
sense of who we are is mostly made up of what we remember being.<br />
We are who we were; we are made up of memories.&#8221; But each of us<br />
also holds in her mind experiences she has forgotten. Do these<br />
memories, the monstrous Anthony speculates, cohere to make<br />
another subject, mutually exclusive to the subject constituted<br />
through the memories one remembers? If so, &#8220;within each of you<br />
there is at least one other entirely different you, made up of<br />
all you&#8217;ve forgotten&#8230; More accurately, there are many other<br />
you&#8217;s, each a different combination of memories. These people<br />
exist. They are complete, if not exactly present, lying in<br />
potential in the buried places in the brain&#8221; (story/séance/she<br />
goes on). Like the eaten body parts incorporated in the animal&#8217;s<br />
flesh that scrape to get out at the resurrection, like the<br />
textual body that exists simultaneously within the equidistant<br />
spaces of computer memory, human memory too is chimerical,<br />
composed of the subject I remember as myself and the multiple<br />
other subjects, also in some sense me, whom I have forgotten but<br />
who remember themselves and not me.</p>
<p>54. When the monster offers to buy a past from Elsie, a randomly<br />
chosen woman she approaches on the street, this lack of a past<br />
is in one sense unique to the monster, a result of her having<br />
been assembled and not born, with no chance to grow into the<br />
adult she now is. In another sense this division between the<br />
past the monster can remember and the pasts embodied in her<br />
several parts is a common human fate. &#8220;We are ourselves<br />
ghostly,&#8221; Anthony/herself goes on. &#8220;Our whole life is a kind of<br />
haunting; the present is thronged by the figures of the past. We<br />
haunt the concrete world as registers of past events&#8230; And we<br />
are haunted, by these ghosts of the living, these invisible<br />
strangers who are ourselves&#8221; (story/séance/she goes on).<br />
Significantly the hybridity performed here is a mental<br />
assemblage that does not depend on or require physical<br />
heterogeneity. Even if the text were an immaterial mental<br />
entity, it still could not be sure of internal cohesion because<br />
the memory that contains it is itself full of holes and other<br />
selves. On many levels and across several interfaces, this<br />
monstrous text thus balances itself between cohesion and<br />
fragmentation, presence and absence, lexia and link, sequence<br />
and simultaneity, coherent selfhood and multiple subjectivities.</p>
<p>55. How can such a text possibly achieve closure? Jane Yellowlees<br />
Douglas, writing on Michael Joyce&#8217;s hypertext fiction Afternoon,<br />
suggests that closure is achieved not when all the lexias have<br />
been read, but when the reader learns enough about the central<br />
mystery to believe she understands it. The privileged lexia, she<br />
suggests, is &#8220;white afternoon&#8221;&#8211;privileged because its<br />
transformative power on the reader&#8217;s understanding of the<br />
mystery is arguably greater than other lexias. Although<br />
Patchwork Girl has no comparable central mystery, it does have a<br />
central dialectic, the oscillation between fragmentation and<br />
recombination. &#8220;I believed that if I concentrated on wishing, my<br />
body itself would erase its scars and be made new,&#8221; the narrator<br />
confesses, an endeavor that continues in dynamic tension with<br />
the simultaneous realization that she is always already<br />
fragmented, ruptured, discontinuous (story/falling<br />
apart/becoming whole). When this oscillation erupts into a<br />
crisis, the text initiates events that make continuation<br />
impossible unless some kind of accommodation is reached. The<br />
crisis occurs when the narrator awakes one morning to find she<br />
is coming apart. As she tries to cover over the cracking seams<br />
with surgical tape, the dispersion rockets toward violence. &#8220;My<br />
foot strove skyward&#8230; trailing blood in mannered specks. My<br />
guts split open and something frilly spilled out&#8230; my right<br />
hand shot gesticulating stump-first eastward&#8221; (story/falling<br />
apart/diaspora). The tide is stemmed when Elsie, the woman whose<br />
past she bought, comes upon the monster disintegrating in the<br />
bathtub and holds onto her. &#8220;I was gathered together loosely in<br />
her attention in a way that was interesting to me, for I was all<br />
in pieces, yet not apart. I felt permitted. I began to invent<br />
something new: a way to hang together without pretending I was<br />
whole. Something between higgledy-piggledy and the eternal<br />
sphere&#8221; (story/falling apart/I made myself over). This<br />
resolution, in which the monster realizes that if she is to<br />
cohere at all it cannot be through unified subjectivity or a<br />
single narrative line, leads to &#8220;afterwards,&#8221; in which the<br />
monster decides that the only life she can lead is nomadic, a<br />
trajectory of &#8220;movement and doubt&#8211;and doubt and movement will<br />
be my life, as long as it lasts&#8221; (story/rethinking/afterwards).<br />
Thus the narrative pattern of her life finally becomes<br />
indistinguishable from the fragmentation and recombination of<br />
the digital technology that produces it, a convergence expressed<br />
earlier through the metaphor of the dotted line: &#8220;I hop from<br />
stone to stone and an electronic river washes out my scent in<br />
the intervals. I am a discontinuous line, a dotted line&#8221; (body<br />
of text/hop). Connecting and dividing, the dotted line of the<br />
monster&#8217;s nomadic trajectory through &#8220;movement and doubt&#8221;<br />
resembles the lexia-link, presence-absence pattern of the<br />
screenic text. Following this trajectory, she goes on to become<br />
a writer herself.</p>
<p>56. But what does she write&#8211;the narrative we are reading? If so,<br />
then the authorial function has shifted at some indeterminate<br />
point (or many indeterminate points) from Mary Shelley to the<br />
monster, recalling the earlier distribution of authorship<br />
between M/S. Just as the reader can no longer be sure if, within<br />
the fictive world, the monster now writes herself or is written<br />
by Mary, so the monster is similarly unsure, in part because her<br />
body, like her subjectivity, is a distributed function. &#8220;I<br />
wonder if I am writing from my thigh, from the crimp-edged<br />
pancakelet of skin we stitched onto me&#8230; Mary writes, I write,<br />
we write, but who is really writing?&#8221; Faced with this<br />
unanswerable question (unanswerable for the reader as for the<br />
narrator), the monster concludes, &#8220;Ghost writers are the only<br />
kind there are&#8221; (story/rethinking/am I mary).</p>
<p>57. The larger conclusion suggested by juxtaposing Patchwork Girl<br />
with eighteenth-century debates and the characteristics of<br />
digital media goes beyond showing how this text makes the<br />
unconscious of the earlier period into the stage for its<br />
performances of hybrid subjectivities by exploiting the<br />
specificities of the computer. More fundamentally, Patchwork<br />
Girl demonstrates that despite such important critical<br />
developments as deconstruction and Lacanian theory, we continue<br />
to operate from assumptions that are grounded in print<br />
technologies and that become problematic in the context of<br />
digital media. Why do we talk and write incessantly about the<br />
&#8220;text,&#8221; a term that obscures differences between technologies of<br />
production and implicitly promotes the work as an immaterial<br />
construct? Why do we continue to talk about the signifier as if<br />
it were a flat mark with no internal structure, when the coding<br />
chains of the digital computer operate in a completely different<br />
fashion? Why do our discussions of reading and writing largely<br />
focus on the author and reader, ignoring the cognitively<br />
sophisticated actions of intelligent machines that are active<br />
participants in the construction of meaning? The effect of<br />
Patchwork Girl&#8217;s creative juxtapositions is to shake us awake<br />
from the dream that electronic fiction is simply &#8220;text&#8221; that we<br />
read on screen instead of on paper. If Patchwork Girl insists<br />
through its appropriations that the past can never be left<br />
behind, it also shows through its transformations that new media<br />
create a new kind of literature and a new sense of cyborg<br />
subjectivity.</p>
<p>58. As we work toward crafting a critical theory capable of dealing<br />
with the complexities of electronic texts, we may also be able<br />
to understand for the first time the full extent to which print<br />
technologies have affected our understanding of literature. The<br />
juxtaposition of print and electronic texts has the potential to<br />
reveal the assumptions specific to each, a clarity obscured when<br />
either is considered in isolation. Mark Rose ends his book (note<br />
that I use the media-specific practice of calling it a book and<br />
not a text) by suggesting that copyright continues to endure,<br />
despite its many problems, because it reinforces &#8220;the sense of<br />
who we are&#8221; (Rose 142). Patchwork Girl invites us to understand<br />
the situation differently. Although the sense of who we are is<br />
still informed by the assumptions of print technology, the<br />
specificities of digital technologies provide writers with<br />
resources to complicate that sense through flickering<br />
connectivities, re-working it into something rich and strange.</p>
<p>English Department<br />
University of California Los Angeles<br />
HAYLES@humnet.ucla.edu</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-</p>
<p>COPYRIGHT (c) 2000 BY N. KATHERINE HAYLES, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.<br />
THIS TEXT MAY BE USED AND SHARED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE FAIR-USE<br />
PROVISIONS OF U.S. COPYRIGHT LAW. ANY USE OF THIS TEXT ON OTHER<br />
TERMS, IN ANY MEDIUM, REQUIRES THE CONSENT OF THE AUTHOR AND THE<br />
PUBLISHER, THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY PRESS.</p>
<p>THIS ARTICLE AND OTHER CONTENTS OF THIS ISSUE ARE AVAILABLE FREE<br />
OF CHARGE UNTIL RELEASE OF THE NEXT ISSUE. A TEXT-ONLY ARCHIVE<br />
OF THE JOURNAL IS ALSO AVAILABLE FREE OF CHARGE. FOR FULL<br />
HYPERTEXT ACCESS TO BACK ISSUES, SEARCH UTILITIES, AND OTHER<br />
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PROJECT MUSE, THE ON-LINE JOURNALS PROJECT OF THE JOHNS HOPKINS<br />
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<p>Notes</p>
<p>1. In formulating the framework for this essay, I am indebted to<br />
the readers who critiqued it for Postmodern Culture. Although<br />
their names are not known to me, I wish to express my gratitude<br />
for their insights and helpful comments.</p>
<p>2. I am indebted to librarian Jennifer Tobias at the Reference<br />
Library of the Museum of Modern Art in New York for arranging<br />
access to their extensive collection of artists&#8217; books. An<br />
excellent survey can be found in Johanna Drucker, The Century of<br />
Artists&#8217; Books. An illustration of the Lewitt book can be found<br />
on page 199.</p>
<p>3. For an exploration of what this Oreo structure signifies in<br />
the context of virtual narratives, see Hayles, &#8220;Simulating<br />
Narratives: What Virtual Creatures Can Teach Us,&#8221; Critical<br />
Inquiry 26 (1999): 1-26.</p>
<p>4. I am indebted to Robert Essex for this example, proposed in a<br />
discussion of William Blake&#8217;s strong dislike of stipple<br />
engraving and his preference (which for Blake amounted to an<br />
ethical issue) for printing technologies that were analogue<br />
rather than digital.</p>
<p>5. There are of course exceptions to every rule. David Stairs<br />
has created a round artist book entitled Boundless with spiral<br />
binding all around, so that it cannot be opened. A similar<br />
strategy is used by Maurizio Nannucci in Universum, a book bound<br />
on both vertical edges so that it cannot be opened. Ann Tyler<br />
also plays with the assumption that pages are visually and<br />
kinesthetically accessible to users in Lubb Dup, an artist book<br />
in which several pages are double-faced, so that one can see the<br />
inside only by peering through a small circle in the middle or<br />
prying the two pages apart enough to peek down through the top.<br />
These plays on accessibility do not, however, negate the<br />
generalization, for the effect is precisely to make us conscious<br />
of the normative rule.</p>
<p>6. This practice was visibly reinforced for me when I sat<br />
through the credits of Wild Wild West and watched this<br />
disclaimer roll up on screen: &#8220;For purposes of copyright, Warner<br />
Bros. is the sole author of this film.&#8221;</p>
<p>7. This list omits the graphics, of which there are several as<br />
the hypertext opens. A note on citations from Patchwork Girl: I<br />
identify them using slashes to indicate a jump in directory<br />
level, moving from higher to lower as is customary in computer<br />
notation. The uppermost level is always a name the reader would<br />
see on the screen when opening the highest level of the map view<br />
in Storyspace, and the lowest level is the lexia in which the<br />
quotation appears. Thus the citation &#8220;body of<br />
text/resurrection/remade&#8221; indicates that within the major<br />
textual component entitled &#8220;body of text&#8221; is a sub-section<br />
entitled &#8220;resurrection,&#8221; which when opened also contains the<br />
lexia &#8220;remade,&#8221; where the quoted passage appears.</p>
<p>8. I am indebted for this reference to Reader #1 in his/her<br />
critique of this essay for Postmodern Culture.</p>
<p>9. This visual narrative begins with a realistic image of a<br />
door, which a man opens to go into a rather ordinary room. With<br />
each successive image, the previous representation is revealed<br />
as a posed photograph, for example by including the photographer<br />
in the picture. As one approaches the center of the book the<br />
images begin shifting angles, and at the midpoint the reader<br />
must turn the book upside down to see the remaining images in<br />
their proper perspective. At the end of the book the images<br />
reverse order, so that the reader then goes backwards through<br />
the book to the front, a direction that the orientation of the<br />
images implicitly defines as forward.</p>
<p>10. The lexia&#8217;s explosive potential may explain why it is<br />
partially hidden. It can be seen in the Storyspace chart view<br />
but is not visible in the more frequently used map view.</p>
<p>Works Cited</p>
<p>Aarseth, Espen J. Cybertext: Perspectives on Ergodic Literature.<br />
Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins UP, 1997.</p>
<p>Barthes, Roland. &#8220;From Work to Text.&#8221; The Rustle of Language.<br />
Trans. Richard Howard. New York: Hill and Wang, 1986. 56-64.</p>
<p>Bolter, Jay David. Writing Space: The Computer, Hypertext, and<br />
the History of Writing. Hillsdale: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates,<br />
1991.</p>
<p>Bolter, Jay David and Richard Grusin. Remediation: Understanding<br />
New Media. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1999.</p>
<p>Coover, Robert. &#8220;The Babysitter.&#8221; Pricksongs and Descants. New<br />
York: Grove Press, 1969. 206-239.</p>
<p>Derrida, Jacques. &#8220;Signature Event Context.&#8221; Limited Inc.<br />
Evanston: Northwestern UP, 1988. 1-24.</p>
<p>Douglas, Jane Yellowlees. &#8220;&#8216;How Do I Stop This Thing?&#8217;: Closure<br />
and Indeterminacy in Interactive Narratives.&#8221; Hyper/Text/Theory.<br />
Ed. George P. Landow. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins UP, 1994.<br />
159-188.</p>
<p>Drucker, Johanna. The Century of Artists&#8217; Books. New York:<br />
Granary Books, 1995.</p>
<p>Foucault, Michel. &#8220;What is an Author?&#8221; Language, Counter-Memory,<br />
Practice: Selected Essays and Interviews. Ed. Donald F.<br />
Bouchard. Trans. Donald F. Bouchard and Sherry Simon. Ithaca:<br />
Cornell UP, 1977. 113-138.</p>
<p>Genette, Gérard. Narrative Discourse: An Essay on Method. Trans.<br />
Jane E. Lewin. Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1983.</p>
<p>Grosz, Elizabeth. Volatile Bodies: Towards a Corporeal Feminism.<br />
Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1994.</p>
<p>Hayles, N. Katherine. &#8220;Simulating Narratives: What Virtual<br />
Creatures Can Teach Us.&#8221; Critical Inquiry 26 (1999): 1-26.</p>
<p>&#8212;. &#8220;Virtual Bodies and Flickering Signifiers.&#8221; How We Became<br />
Posthuman: Virtual Bodies in Cybernetics, Literature, and<br />
Informatics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999. 25-49.</p>
<p>Jackson, Shelley. Patchwork Girl by Mary/Shelley and herself.<br />
Watertown, MA: Eastgate Systems, 1995. Electronic.<br />
&#60;http://www.eastgate.com&#62;.</p>
<p>&#8212;. &#8220;Stitch Bitch: The Patchwork Girl.&#8221; Paradoxa 4 (1998):<br />
526-538.</p>
<p>Johnson, Barbara. &#8220;My Monster/My Self.&#8221; Diacritics 12.2 (1982):<br />
2-10.</p>
<p>Landow, George. Hypertext 2.0: The Convergence of Contemporary<br />
Critical Theory and Technology. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins UP,<br />
1997.</p>
<p>Lewitt, Sol. Squares with the Sides and Corners Torn Off.<br />
Brussels: MTL, 1974.</p>
<p>Macpherson, C. B. The Political Theory of Possessive<br />
Individualism: Hobbes to Locke. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1962.</p>
<p>Mellor, Anne K. Mary Shelley: Her Life, Her Fiction, Her<br />
Monsters. New York: Routledge, 1988.</p>
<p>Nannucci, Maurizio. Universum. N.p.: Biancoenero Publishers,<br />
1969.</p>
<p>Rose, Mark. Authors and Owners: The Invention of Copyright.<br />
Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1993.</p>
<p>Snow, Michael. Cover to Cover. Halifax: Nova Scotia College of<br />
Art and Design; New York: New York UP, 1975.</p>
<p>Stairs, David. Boundless. N.p.: D. Stairs, 1983.</p>
<p>Tyler, Ann. Lubb Dup. Chicago: Sara Ranchouse Publishing, 1998.HyHa</p>
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<title><![CDATA[Prevent and Control High Blood Pressure:Mission Possible]]></title>
<link>http://msaerospace.wordpress.com/2009/11/04/prevent-and-control-high-blood-pressuremission-possible/</link>
<pubDate>Wed, 04 Nov 2009 19:04:48 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>msaerospace</dc:creator>
<guid>http://msaerospace.wordpress.com/2009/11/04/prevent-and-control-high-blood-pressuremission-possible/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[   &nbsp; By: Charles E. McLean November 4, 2009 Approximately 30% of the U.S. adult population has ]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p><strong> </strong><strong> </strong></p>
<p>&#160;</p>
<p>By: Charles E. McLean November 4, 2009</p>
<p>Approximately 30% of the U.S. adult population has high blood pressure (also called hypertension). Anyone can get it; overweight, diabetes, and old age are factors that increase the likelihood of developing high blood pressure.  High blood pressure heightens your possibility of having a heart attack, heart failure, stroke, kidney disease, and other life-threatening illnesses.  Remember your heart has to work a lot harder when your blood pressure is high.</p>
<p>High blood pressure is sometimes called the ‘silent killer’ because in most cases it has no noticeable warning signs or symptoms until other serious problems arise.  Therefore, many people remain unaware that they have it. However, high blood pressure is easily detectable and can be controlled. You should always have an idea of what your blood pressure is, just as you know your height and weight.</p>
<p>The blood pressure is recorded as two numbers, such as 120/80.  The first number stands for Systolic and the second stands for Diastolic.  These are Medical terms so the following are interpretations of a blood pressure reading:</p>
<p>Below 120/80                            =          Healthy blood pressure</p>
<p>Between 120/80 and 140/90       =          Early high blood pressure</p>
<p>140/90 and higher                     =          High blood pressure</p>
<p>High blood pressure won’t go away without treatment. Here are some easy tips to help reduce your blood pressure:</p>
<p>•Work with your health care provider to find a treatment plan that&#8217;s right for you.</p>
<p>•Eat whole-grain breads, cereals and vegetables.</p>
<p>•Check food labels and choose foods with less than 400 mg of sodium per serving.</p>
<p>•Lose weight or take steps to prevent weight gain. <em></em></p>
<p>Take advantage of the tools here at <a href="http://www.msaerospace.com" target="_blank">MS Aerospace </a>to create a culture of wellness.</p>
<p>Every Friday there are free and confidential high blood pressure tests at 2:15 for 2<sup>nd</sup> shift and 2:30 for 1<sup>st</sup> shift in the Safety Office. We keep the record of your readings to help you monitor your health as an option to you. Please, check for more wellness articles on the MSA wellness board. Approximately 30% of the U.S. adult population has high blood pressure.</p>
<p>High blood pressure is a serious problem for Hispanics. Hispanics get high blood pressure more often. Almost 1 in 4 Hispanic adults have high blood pressure. Most Hispanics do not know that high blood pressure can hurt their kidneys. A recent study showed that less than half (46%) of Hispanics know that high blood pressure can cause kidney failure.</p>
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<title><![CDATA[MS AEROSPACE SIGNS WITH DISTRIBUTOR IN AUSTRALIA AND NZ]]></title>
<link>http://msaerospace.wordpress.com/2009/11/04/ms-aerospace-signs-with-distributor-in-australia-and-nz/</link>
<pubDate>Wed, 04 Nov 2009 17:32:10 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>msaerospace</dc:creator>
<guid>http://msaerospace.wordpress.com/2009/11/04/ms-aerospace-signs-with-distributor-in-australia-and-nz/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[By: Charles E. McLean November 4, 2009 MS Aerospace has announced signing an agreement with aerospac]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p>By: Charles E. McLean November 4, 2009</p>
<p><a href="http://www.msaerospace.com" target="_blank">MS Aerospace </a>has announced signing an agreement with aerospace distributor <a href="http://www.flitepath.com.au/html/home.html" target="_blank">Flite Path </a>granting Flite Path an exclusive sales arrangement for Australia and New Zealand.</p>
<p>            “We are very excited about our new partner “downunder”, and are very hopeful for a mutually beneficial relationship”, said Michel Szostak, President of MS Aerospace Inc.</p>
<p>            Establishing a sales presence in Australia and New Zealand is important to MSA, and is consistent with MSA’s long-term marketing strategy of market expansion internationally in order to take advantage of MS A’s competitiveness in the marketplace.</p>
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<title><![CDATA[USC Progressive Alliance Adds to Growing Radicalism in College Campuses]]></title>
<link>http://qudosi.com/2009/11/04/usc-progressive-alliance-adds-to-growing-radicalism-in-college-campuses/</link>
<pubDate>Wed, 04 Nov 2009 04:59:26 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Shireen Qudosi</dc:creator>
<guid>http://qudosi.com/2009/11/04/usc-progressive-alliance-adds-to-growing-radicalism-in-college-campuses/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[by Shireen Qudosi Universities, long esteemed institutions for the free exchange of ideas, seem to b]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p>by Shireen Qudosi</p>
<p>Universities, long esteemed institutions for the free exchange of ideas, seem to be on the endangered species list thanks to a growing number of radical Muslim student associations.  While thousands of students run the gauntlet to be accepted to some of Southern  California’s top schools, the irony of it is that once there they seek to inhibit the inherent call for tolerance and free speech that develops the so-called ‘educated mind’.</p>
<p>Unfortunately for an increasing list of So Cal colleges, Muslims students, marginal MSA agendas, and future Islamists in the making, are serving as impediments to education rather than assets to their university and community group.  I initially experienced this first hand during open-air assaults and marches pitting UCI’s 2001-2002 Muslim Student Association against a larger student body through campus wide protests against – what else, Israel.</p>
<p>Clearly the situation escalated beyond UCI as newer generations not only held campus-wide protest and lunch-time brawls, but starting inviting speakers who outside groups found to be controversial.</p>
<p>While there’s the question of what duty a university has in all this, the majority of Muslim students continued exercising their First Amendment right to congregate and speak freely.</p>
<p>More recent developments show this basic right to assemble, clearly exercised with the MSA, is found offensive by Muslims if a group or individual speaks unfavorably of Islam or Muslims in any context.</p>
<p>Sound familiar. It should.  This is the classic case of “do as I say not as I do” that’s been surfacing nationwide and beyond. Dozens of cases continue to surmount where Muslims protest against any act of speech found as subjectively offensive. Muslim measures to constrict non-Muslim free speech are evident in the rise of Islamist activity taken by Muslim interest groups; note the lack of any real <em>internal </em>opposition here.</p>
<p>These violations of free speech, the failed logic of free-speech-inspired protests to limit free speech, are surfacing with alarming frequency within university walls &#8211; and with little to no proactive efforts from university officials.</p>
<p>As recently as September 22, 2009, <a href="http://www.investigativeproject.org/1424/kerfuffle-on-campus-over-sharia-lecture">Whittier College</a> faced an onslaught of protests for hosting Nonie Darwish, a Muslim born Egyptian who converted to Christianity. Whether Muslims found the conversion offensive and/or her open criticism of sharia law, the fact remains that herein was another case of open protests and pressures against a higher learning institution to regulate our First Amendment rights.</p>
<p>Now, just over a month later, USC faces a similar problem.  At 7 pm on November 4<sup>th, </sup>by invitation of the USC College Republicans, David Horowitz is expected to <a href="http://newsrealblog.com/2009/11/03/the-islamic-war-on-freedom-at-usc" target="_blank">speak</a> on the “genocidal incitement of the prophet Mohammed that calls on Muslims to exterminate the Jews as the condition of their redemption.”</p>
<p>Citing a violent quote as a hadith posted on the official USC website courtesy of the USC Muslim Student Union, the entanglement began when the incendiary words were removed by university officials (only to reappear courtesy of the Center for Muslim-Jewish Engagement). [<a href="http://newsrealblog.com/2009/11/03/the-islamic-war-on-freedom-at-usc/">see full text</a>]</p>
<p>Apparently, for USC Muslims groups, freedom of speech is a privilege that is only available to them. And though the initial removal of the quote incited fury among this lot, there were apparently no qualms when so-called activist Alex Sham dispersed the following propagandist leaflet on tomorrow’s event – a leaflet charged with defamation of character of both Horowitz and the USC College Republicans:</p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-818" title="USC Progressive Alliance Horowitz" src="http://qudosi.wordpress.com/files/2009/11/horowitz-slanders-by-usc-progressive-alliance.jpg" alt="USC Progressive Alliance Horowitz" width="391" height="512" /></p>
<p>This by the ironically labeled USC Progressive Alliance, with their little terrorist logo in the bottom right corner, is beyond absurd. I wonder how many USC Muslim students found this offensive, and how few of those if any will speak out against it.</p>
<p>Through creating and circulating this flyer, the USC “Progressive Alliance” is ripe for a considerable number of lawsuits. Beyond that, they prove they are no better than the stereotypes allotted to various Muslims Student Associations.</p>
<p>The flyer is manipulative, insulting, and untruthful. It directly contributes to racism and stereotypes by associating what appears as a jihadi with a “progressive alliance”.</p>
<p>The boldly marked words “HATE MUSLIMS? SO DO WE!!!” incites violence, and misleads the reader into thinking that the affiliate group and speaker quote ‘hate Muslims’.  The flyer is ripe for a libel lawsuit.</p>
<p>As a Muslim, I am disgusted by the continued opposition to free speech and free congregation guaranteed to us by the First Amendment.  I am deeply offended by this flyer and the racism it peddles against Muslims, against Jews, and against Republicans.</p>
<p>The people behind the USC Progressive Alliance, and the monstrously ignorant flyer produced by them, are both symptoms of a primitive mind – proving that just because you went to school doesn’t mean you’re educated. <strong></strong></p>
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<title><![CDATA[addiction]]></title>
<link>http://islaminaction.wordpress.com/2009/10/25/addiction/</link>
<pubDate>Mon, 26 Oct 2009 03:57:28 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Ml. Muhammad Shoayb</dc:creator>
<guid>http://islaminaction.wordpress.com/2009/10/25/addiction/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Q. Imaam, i am addicted to bad things. I am addicted to zinna (adultery). Can you give help or advic]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p><strong>Q.</strong> Imaam, i am addicted to bad things. I am addicted to zinna (adultery). Can you give help or advice? (text message)</p>
<p><strong>Answer: </strong></p>
<ul>
<li>know and acknowledge that it as a haram act</li>
<li>After every salah, ask Allah (Subhanahu Wata’Ala) for forgiveness</li>
<li>Just think if the person you are committing adultery with to be your mother, sister, aunt, etc. Would you like people sleeping with mother, sister, etc. whilst them not being married to you?</li>
<li>impose a penalty on yourself. give $100 to a person you dislike as a penalty for your zina. $250 to a poor person, etc</li>
<li>Be in the company of people that don’t flirt</li>
<li>Go to the musjid for all your prayers</li>
</ul>
<p><em>Allah certianly knows best. </em></p>
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<title><![CDATA[Don’t take the 'baby' soap from just any place!]]></title>
<link>http://islaminaction.wordpress.com/2009/10/23/don%e2%80%99t-take-the-baby-soap-from-just-any-place/</link>
<pubDate>Sat, 24 Oct 2009 03:40:52 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Ml. Muhammad Shoayb</dc:creator>
<guid>http://islaminaction.wordpress.com/2009/10/23/don%e2%80%99t-take-the-baby-soap-from-just-any-place/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Q. Can a hotel patron take ‘baby’ soaps, shavers, lotions, note pads, pens and other complementary g]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p><span style="font-size:11pt;"><strong>Q.</strong> Can a hotel patron take ‘baby’ soaps, shavers, lotions, note pads, pens and other complementary gifts from hotel rooms? What can be taken without it being theft?<br />
</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size:11pt;"><strong>A.</strong> Things <em>given to you</em> for your usage as ‘gifts’ or as part of making your stay comfortable at a hotel/motel would remain permissible for you to take home with you. These ‘takings’ generally falls into the category of complementary gifts and function as an enticement to clientele.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size:11pt;">To take away bed sheets, blankets, towels, towel racks, etc. would not be allowed, unless agreed upon. It is clearly understood that these items remain for in-house usage. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-size:11pt;">It would be best for you, if you are in doubt, merely consult with guest services and ask them for clarification as to what are the consequences if certain items are taken from the room. There response would be an indication of what would constitute theft or a gift towards its patrons.</span></p>
<p><em><span style="font-size:11pt;">Allah Certainly Knows Best. </span></em></p>
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<title><![CDATA[so long as it is only talking you doing]]></title>
<link>http://islaminaction.wordpress.com/2009/10/23/so-long-as-it-is-only-talking-you-doing/</link>
<pubDate>Sat, 24 Oct 2009 03:40:34 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Ml. Muhammad Shoayb</dc:creator>
<guid>http://islaminaction.wordpress.com/2009/10/23/so-long-as-it-is-only-talking-you-doing/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Q. Can I talk to my husband before I marry him? What questions are asked in marriage interview? Also]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p><strong>Q.</strong> Can I talk to my husband before I marry him?</p>
<p>What questions are asked in marriage interview? Also can u tell me of do&#8217;s and donts?</p>
<p><strong>A.</strong> With your appropriate Mahram present, yes, you would be allowed to communicate with your intended spouse. It is best that this communication be focused on achieving greater insight as to your intended. The conversation should not be mere chit chat.</p>
<p>http://islaminaction.wordpress.com/2009/04/02/no-you-cannot-see-it-all</p>
<p><em>Allah certainly knows Best. </em></p>
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<title><![CDATA[Tafsir and Fiqh class on October 23th ]]></title>
<link>http://islaminaction.wordpress.com/2009/10/22/tafsir-fiqh-class-on-october-23th/</link>
<pubDate>Thu, 22 Oct 2009 13:19:48 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Ml. Muhammad Shoayb</dc:creator>
<guid>http://islaminaction.wordpress.com/2009/10/22/tafsir-fiqh-class-on-october-23th/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[We will be starting a Tafsir &amp; Fiqh class on October 23th every Friday from 5:30-7 P.M. in room ]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><div id=":fb"><span style="color:#242626;font-family:'Lucida Grande','Helvetica Neue',Arial,'Lucida Sans Unicode',sans-serif;font-size:13px;line-height:20px;"><span style="font-size:28px;outline-width:0;color:#ff0000;border-width:0;margin:0;padding:0;">We will be starting a Tafsir &#38; Fiqh class on October 23th every Friday from 5:30-7 P.M. in room 323 in the Union.</span></p>
<p style="font-size:13px;outline-width:0;color:#4d4d4d;border-width:0;margin:0 0 9px;padding:0;">This is a FREE CLASS<strong> </strong>and we will be going over Tafsir of Holy Quran and essential parts of fiqh.</p>
<p style="font-size:13px;outline-width:0;color:#4d4d4d;border-width:0;margin:0 0 9px;padding:0;">The Tafsir &#38;  <span style="font-size:13px;outline-style:none;line-height:1.2em;background-color:#ffffcc;border-width:0;margin:0;padding:0;">Fiqh </span>class will be taught by Imaam Muhammed Shoayb Mehtar. If you have any questions regarding this class please email us, or call the MSA president.<span style="font-size:13px;outline-style:none;line-height:1.2em;border-width:0;margin:0;padding:0;"> </span></p>
<p style="font-size:13px;outline-width:0;color:#4d4d4d;border-width:0;margin:0 0 9px;padding:0;"><span style="font-size:13px;outline-style:none;line-height:1.2em;border-width:0;margin:0;padding:0;">Jazakullah Khair</span></p>
<p style="font-size:13px;outline-width:0;color:#4d4d4d;border-width:0;margin:0 0 9px;padding:0;"><span style="font-size:13px;outline-width:0;line-height:15px;border-width:0;margin:0;padding:0;">MSAUU</span></p>
<p style="font-size:13px;outline-width:0;color:#4d4d4d;border-width:0;margin:0 0 9px;padding:0;"><span style="font-size:13px;outline-width:0;line-height:15px;border-width:0;margin:0;padding:0;">p.s. those that were part of the Saturday class. Kindly try and stay until 7:30. You be getting Quran memorization lessons as well as other important things to learn.<br />
</span></p>
<p></span></div>
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<title><![CDATA[Of 23 Pager MSAs]]></title>
<link>http://mylifeintelecom.wordpress.com/2009/10/22/of-23-pager-msas/</link>
<pubDate>Thu, 22 Oct 2009 02:02:24 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>mylifeintelecom</dc:creator>
<guid>http://mylifeintelecom.wordpress.com/2009/10/22/of-23-pager-msas/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[A new project with a good prospective client just fell through. Great pricing, the promise of over-d]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p>A new project with a good prospective client just fell through. Great pricing, the promise of over-delivering a shaky installation, and multiple pitches on why &#8220;I am the best sales/ sales engineer/ telecom know-all&#8221; was &#8220;supposed&#8221; to win them over. Or so I thought. Well, they were won over, except for a small hitch&#8230;.three heart breaking letters, three headache inducing words: Master Service Agreement.</p>
<p>I didn&#8217;t think that the client would kick much fuss about the company&#8217;s MSA. Being a re-seller, the MSA is not very signer-friendly. However, it is &#8220;very&#8221; flexible&#8230;.we will do pretty much &#8220;anything&#8221; to sell&#8230;..(anything!).<br />
The prospect asks us to send the order form, and then goes radio silent.<br />
Why? Why? Why?</p>
<p>The terms and conditions on your order form.</p>
<p>But&#8230;but&#8230;.but&#8230;.we can change the MSA to suit your needs.</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t have the time.</p>
<p>Seriously&#8230;&#8230;I mean&#8230;.seriously?</p>
<p>Yeah.</p>
<p>But you asked me to send the order form! I have the lower quote!</p>
<p>Yeah.</p>
<p>So? I&#8217;ll reduce the pricing further. Go and pull the fiber in the conduits myself.</p>
<p>Told you&#8230;.no time.</p>
<p>For what??</p>
<p>To negotiate your MSA. It&#8217;s 23 pages long.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s 6 pages long! Are you serious?</p>
<p>Yeah. Send me a one pager.</p>
<p>I DON&#8221;T have a one-pager.</p>
<p>Umm&#8230;..get it somehow.</p>
<p>You send me YOUR one pager&#8230;.(please)</p>
<p>Umm&#8230;.Send me a one pager.</p>
<p>Seriously&#8230;.I mean&#8230;seriously???? (wondering if the human eye can read Times Roman in 0.5).</p>
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<title><![CDATA[To be poured out. . . .]]></title>
<link>http://mountupwitheagles.wordpress.com/2009/10/19/to-be-poured-out/</link>
<pubDate>Mon, 19 Oct 2009 15:35:33 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>cdayers</dc:creator>
<guid>http://mountupwitheagles.wordpress.com/2009/10/19/to-be-poured-out/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Before leaving for Nebraska, I began to mediate on some verses from the book of Philippians - Theref]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p>Before leaving for Nebraska, I began to mediate on some verses from the book of Philippians -</p>
<p id="p50002012.05-1" style="text-indent:2em;text-align:justify;">Therefore, my beloved, as you have always obeyed, so now, not only as in my presence but much more in my absence, work out your own salvation with fear and trembling,<span id="v50002013-1" style="font-size:13px;font-weight:bold;padding-right:.15em;padding-left:.25em;vertical-align:text-top;font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"> </span>for it is God who works in you, both to will and to work for his good pleasure.  Do all things without grumbling or questioning,<span id="v50002015-1" style="font-size:13px;font-weight:bold;padding-right:.15em;padding-left:.25em;vertical-align:text-top;font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"> </span>that you may be blameless and innocent, children of God without blemish in the midst of a crooked and twisted generation, among whom you shine as lights in the world, holding fast to the word of life, so that in the day of Christ I may be proud that I did not run in vain or labor in vain. <strong>Even if I am to be poured out as a drink offering upon the sacrificial offering of your faith, I am glad and rejoice with you all. </strong><span id="v50002018-1" style="font-size:13px;font-weight:bold;padding-right:.15em;padding-left:.25em;vertical-align:text-top;font-family:Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"> </span>Likewise you also should be glad and rejoice with me. (verses 12 &#8211; 18).</p>
<p style="text-indent:2em;text-align:justify;">Verse 17 stood out to me &#8211; the illustration of being poured out as if from a pitcher was an interesting one for me to ponder as I was preparing to go to Nebraska and serve.  The context of the verse is on serving as Christ did. Since I was not all that familiar with a drink offering, I decided to spend some time looking at what it was and how it was used.</p>
<p style="text-indent:2em;text-align:justify;">If one looks back and looks at the Levitical priesthood,  you see that the primary offerings were animals, birds and grains.  God ordained that with each sacrificial offering, there would also be a drink offering which consisted of wine poured out together with the offering.  This is what Paul is referring to as he speaks of pouring out his life for the Philippians.</p>
<p style="text-indent:2em;text-align:justify;">What does it look like to pour out ones life as a drink offering?  Paul was referring to the old testament practice as he is writing as his life blood is about to be poured out to seal the offering he was bringing to God &#8211; the fruits of his ministry.  By way of inference, a life that is poured out in God&#8217;s service is an acceptable offering in the sight of God.</p>
<p style="text-indent:2em;text-align:justify;">I am sure that there is much more to a drink offering and I am still studying it, but for me as I was in Nebraska pouring myself out meant being willing to walk with my dad around the addition with constant reminders of what he needed to do and then do it a few hours later knowing that he would not remember what we had just done.  It also meant bending over, putting more stress on my back to be able to look my dad in the eyes when I was talking to him, putting my hand on his back to put pressure on him to keep him in the right position with the walker and putting pressure on the walker to keep Dad from pushing it too far out in front.  Since my dad&#8217;s brain and body do not communicate well, it sometimes meant physically moving his right side to help him to keep moving.  Sometimes it meant taking the walker and showing Dad what he is currently doing and then illustrating what he needs to work towards.  It also meant being willing to get up with dad at least twice each night to help him get to the bathroom and if necessary change his clothes.</p>
<p style="text-indent:2em;text-align:justify;">I realized a couple of things during this visit.  One thing is that mom rarely eats a meal with my dad and she does so grudgingly when we are there.  Dad is a very social person and the additional people around him this weekend helped to stimulate him.  He didn&#8217;t care if we talked to him, just having us around was important to him.</p>
<p style="text-indent:2em;text-align:justify;">The second thing is that physical touch is so important.  My dad loves to dance and is used to giving signals to his dance partner with his hands.  The same is true for my dad at this point.  I am learning how to &#8220;direct&#8221; my dad&#8217;s body through the use of directed pressure on my dad&#8217;s back.  He responds rather quickly to this type of direction as it &#8220;shows&#8221; him where he needs to go with his body.  I tried to get mom to do this &#8211; but she refused.  She said she could watch him from the table.  The problem with that is that she is not there if he falls or needs to have some help in getting his body to move.  Using physical touch to help Dad get what he needs indicates a willingness to give of your self in order to help another.  She is not one to do more than the minimum necessary to take care of my dad and she does it grudgingly.</p>
<p style="text-indent:2em;text-align:justify;">Giovanna gets what it means to pour oneself out as demonstrated by this picture;</p>
<p style="text-indent:2em;text-align:justify;">
<div id="attachment_783" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 234px"><img class="size-medium wp-image-783" title="Dad and GiGi" src="http://mountupwitheagles.wordpress.com/files/2009/10/dad-and-gigi.jpg?w=224" alt="Giovanna helping her Grandpa!" width="224" height="300" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Giovanna helping her Grandpa!</p></div>
<p>She has been through a difficult recovery from surgery and knows how important physical touch is!  She was a great help as I worked with Dad.  He seemed to enjoy her interactions as well.</p>
<p style="text-indent:2em;text-align:justify;">I know that Dad responds well to both Gary and I as we work with him, especially during the night time.  He senses that we love and care for him and willingly (at least most of the time) does what we ask him to do.   We provide the rationale behind what we are asking so that he understands why we are asking certain things.</p>
<p style="text-indent:2em;text-align:justify;">Dad has a long road ahead of him and I have no idea what God has in store for him, but I am asking God to use the illustration of pouring out my life for his faith to point him to God and the work of Jesus on the cross.  I am willing to pour out my life sacrificially in order for my dad&#8217;s faith to be built.  Please pray that God will accomplish that in my dad.</p>
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<title><![CDATA[Gender - Tutor - MSA]]></title>
<link>http://islaminaction.wordpress.com/2009/10/14/gender-tutor-msa/</link>
<pubDate>Thu, 15 Oct 2009 01:37:09 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Ml. Muhammad Shoayb</dc:creator>
<guid>http://islaminaction.wordpress.com/2009/10/14/gender-tutor-msa/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Q. 1) السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته Is it allowed for men to tutor women and for women to tutor me]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p><strong>Q. 1) </strong></p>
<p>السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته</p>
<p>Is it allowed for men to tutor women and for women to tutor men in both religious and secular subjects? Can a man tutor two women and can a women tutor two men?</p>
<p>Jazakullah khair in advance.</p>
<p><strong>Q 2)</strong> In the MSA we got an issue and I want your opinion. Can you share guidelines for tutoring between men and woman/</p>
<p>Time: Monday October 5, 2009</p>
<p><strong>Answers:</strong></p>
<p>وعليكم السلام ورحمة الله وبركاته</p>
<p>In a secular setting, the following rules would apply:</p>
<ul>
<li>First preference must be given to the same gender and religion</li>
<li>Thereafter, nonmuslim but yet same gender</li>
<li><strong>If no substitute exists for this given function (subject)</strong>, then only would cross gender tutoring be allowed, however, with dislike. It must prove a necessity in a persons life. The education itself must also prove as part of necessity</li>
<li>If a mahram exists, then the mahram must present. Rules of hijab must also be maintained even with mahram</li>
<li>It should be in a setting wherein an innocent persons name would not tainted</li>
<li>Dress code norms must be adhered to. Every law of modesty must be maintained. Appropriate distance would be used as caution. Staring and dazing into the other would not be allowed under any circumstances. Flirting must terminate all interactions</li>
<li>The interaction must be limited to fulfilling the function at hand, and nothing more. No exchange of other personal unwanted data, flirtatious texts or emails, etc. must be tolerated.</li>
<li>The above answer is based on necessity. If the mischief is greater then good, then such interactions must be terminated in the interest of the good image of MSA – a Muslim organization indeed!</li>
</ul>
<p><em>Allah Certainly Knows Best.<!--more--></em></p>
<p>In a religious setting, personal tutoring across gender lines has not be heard of by me. Kindly clarify without making the matter into a mess.</p>
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<title><![CDATA[Training: The Road To Success At MS Aerospace]]></title>
<link>http://msaerospace.wordpress.com/2009/10/13/training-the-road-to-success-at-ms-aerospace/</link>
<pubDate>Tue, 13 Oct 2009 17:59:56 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>msaerospace</dc:creator>
<guid>http://msaerospace.wordpress.com/2009/10/13/training-the-road-to-success-at-ms-aerospace/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[By: Charles E. McLean;  October 13, 2009 MS Aerospace is always on a road to excellence. Training is]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p>By: Charles E. McLean;  October 13, 2009</p>
<p><a href="http://www.msaerospace.com" target="_blank">MS Aerospace </a>is always on a road to excellence. Training is a huge part of this ongoing pursuit.  We take responsibility for our employees, because they are valuable contributors to the organization.  We offer the opportunity to develop and improve their skills with our training programs. </p>
<p>Two major training projects took place in the month of October: Parts Handling and Clocking In and Out of Visual.  Parts Handling Training discusses how improper handling of our parts can create a major loss due to damaged products.  Our objective is to eliminate this loss by emphasizing extreme care when handling all parts.  </p>
<p>Clocking In and Out of Visual Training explains how this process gives us detailed insight about what and how much is being produced at <a href="http://www.msaerospace.com" target="_blank">MS Aerospace</a>.  This tool is an important source for production control.  Visual is also used for many other useful tracking metrics at <a href="http://www.msaerospace.com" target="_blank">MSA</a>. A better understanding of Visual by our employees is useful for our continual improvement.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.msaerospace.com" target="_blank">MS Aerospace</a> employees are encouraged to improve themselves as much as possible through our offered training programs.  We understand that continuous training means continuous success.  Through our success we further demonstrate our dedication and commitment to supplying our customers with world class products–<a href="http://www.msaerospace.com" target="_blank">the best aerospace fasteners </a>in the marketplace.</p>
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<title><![CDATA[nail cutting -- already answered]]></title>
<link>http://islaminaction.wordpress.com/2009/10/13/nail-cutting-already-answered/</link>
<pubDate>Tue, 13 Oct 2009 13:00:47 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Ml. Muhammad Shoayb</dc:creator>
<guid>http://islaminaction.wordpress.com/2009/10/13/nail-cutting-already-answered/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Q. is it allowed to cut nails after doing wudu? A. Yes. (Please type in nails within our search box ]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p><strong>Q. </strong>is it allowed to cut nails after doing wudu?</p>
<p><strong>A.</strong> Yes. (Please type in nails within our search box for more information regarding nail cuttings)</p>
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<title><![CDATA[Mohawk Bus Pass Petition]]></title>
<link>http://mohawkgogreen.wordpress.com/2009/10/12/mohawk-bus-pass-petition/</link>
<pubDate>Mon, 12 Oct 2009 20:06:44 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>mdsweet80</dc:creator>
<guid>http://mohawkgogreen.wordpress.com/2009/10/12/mohawk-bus-pass-petition/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[There&#8217;s a petition drive underway on campus, organized by an MSA club, the Mohawk Bus Pass Com]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p>There&#8217;s a petition drive underway on campus, organized by an MSA club, the Mohawk Bus Pass Committee.  Their members have already been showing up in classrooms and common areas asking for signatures.  Expect more to come in the next couple of weeks.</p>
<p>What are they getting signatures for?  Simply put, the College hasn&#8217;t asked its students whether they want some kind of subsidized HSR bus pass in ten years, and that&#8217;s too long.  This petition is mainly designed to prove to the MSA that there is enough interest among the student body to justify holding a referendum on the issue and open negotiations with the HSR.</p>
<p>Add your signature and ask the MSA to continue the discussion, through a referendum.  Sounds exciting eh?</p>
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<title><![CDATA[TRAINING IS SUCCESSFUL AT MS AEROSPACE]]></title>
<link>http://msaerospace.wordpress.com/2009/10/12/training-is-successful-at-ms-aerospace/</link>
<pubDate>Mon, 12 Oct 2009 15:23:20 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>msaerospace</dc:creator>
<guid>http://msaerospace.wordpress.com/2009/10/12/training-is-successful-at-ms-aerospace/</guid>
<description><![CDATA[By: Charles E. McLean October 12, 2009 TRAINING PROCEDURES – A  STEP TO MSA QUALITY IMPROVEMENT Our ]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><p>By: Charles E. McLean October 12, 2009</p>
<p>TRAINING PROCEDURES – A  STEP TO <a href="http://www.msaerospace.com" target="_blank">MSA</a> QUALITY IMPROVEMENT</p>
<p>Our workplace is a dynamic environment. In an effort to become a more efficient and effective organization, <a href="http://www.msaerospace.com" target="_blank">MS Aerospace </a>provides extensive information to its employees, and focuses on providing employees the knowledge they need to complete their jobs while remaining safe at all times. Also, our employees display a greater sense of ownership and pride in their work; putting <a href="http://www.msaerospace.com" target="_blank">MSA</a> in a stronger position as a team.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.msaerospace.com" target="_blank">MSA</a> uses our “Training Matrix ™” as a powerful tool to keep track of our training needs. This clearly shows us what types of training are required for various departments or for specific employees. It is formatted for the purpose of easy referencing so a manager, trainer or employee can refer to it quickly finding the necessary information. The Matrix keeps us up-to-date on each employee’s training status, so we can determine who has the proper training to perform which operations.</p>
<p>The knowledge an employee gains from a training program is key to a safe workplace. An effective training program will lower incident and accident rates.</p>
<p>Another benefit of the Matrixes is that they represent who has been cross-trained in our organization.  Cross training is essential to running a successful business and creating a positive work environment for employees.  With the proper cross-training, <a href="http://www.msaerospace.com" target="_blank">MSA</a> will be ready and able to continue normal operations as any obstacle comes our way. Effective cross training allows senior team members to pass tasks off to newer employees, freeing up themselves to take on new responsibilities.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.msaerospace.com" target="_blank">MSA</a> is aware that our employees are the key to our success, and that is why we strive to keep everyone well informed and trained.</p>
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