Hello World

Hello World

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Books (single author, editor, contributor)

  • 2013 Technobiophilia: Nature and Cyberspace
  • 2012 In the Flesh: Twenty Writers Explore the Body
  • 2009 Handbook of Research on Social Software and Developing Community Ontologies
  • 2008 Transdisciplinary Digital Art: Sound, Vision and the New Screen
  • 2004 Hello World: Travels in Virtuality
  • 2002 Reload: Rethinking Women and Cyberculture
  • 2000 Inhuman Reflections: Rethinking the Limits of the Human
  • 1999 The Noon Quilt
  • 1998 Crossing The Border
  • 1995 Creative Writing : A Handbook for Workshop Leaders
  • 1994 Wild Women: Contemporary Short Stories by Women Celebrating Women
  • 1994 Water
  • 1992 Correspondence
  • 1990 Where No Man has Gone Before: Essays on Women and Science Fiction

Snippets from the past

  • 2012 Traces of the trAce Online Writing Centre 1995-2005 | Jacket2
  • 2005 trAces: A Commemoration of Ten Years of Artistic Innovation at trAce
  • 2005 trAce Online Writing Centre Archive
  • 2004 Sistema Purificacion
  • 2003 Spivak
  • 2002 Writing Machines by N.Katherine Hayles
  • 2002 Tools of the trade
  • 2002 Stephanie Strickland: Living in the Space between Print and Online
  • 2002 No visible means of support
  • 2002 A New Sensibility? The qualities of a new media writer
  • 2001 Interview by 3am Magazine
  • 2000 lux : notes for an electronic writing
  • 2000 Evolving Practice: writers working online with trAce
  • 2000 Correspondence @ Riding the Meridian
  • 2000 ::::::In Place of the Page::::::
  • 1999 Tremble
  • 1999 The [+]Net[+] of Desire
  • 1999 Noon Quilt
  • 1999 Interview by Full Circle
  • 1998 Sharing a common language online
  • 1998 Land: Textual MOO-based virtual landscapes
  • 1998 Imagining a stone: virtual landscapes
  • 1998 Ensemble Logic + Choragraphy
  • 1998 Creative interaction in cyberspace
  • 1997 Revolver


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    This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. Unless otherwise expressly stated, all original material of whatever nature created by Sue Thomas and included in this weblog and any related pages, including the weblog's archives, is included in this License.

Jenny Wolmark

Review by Jenny Wolmark
Principal Lecturer, Department of Design, University of Lincoln, UK

This new book by Sue Thomas is an engaging account of journeys taken in both the real and the virtual world. Sue gives us cybertheory with a lighter touch than we are accustomed to, as she explores some of the similarities and differences between these worlds. She describes a series of 'real life' travels and moments - a trip to California, looking at the night sky from her garden in England, travelling by train across Australia, and the oddly disconnected nature of these experiences vividly makes the point that real life travels are no more or less strange than travels in the virtual world.

Any one who feels both seduced and appalled by the complexities of embedded technology will empathise with Sue's account of the personal highs and lows of her own intimate relationship with the technology. The book breaks down the barriers between forms and fictions, and in doing so it reveals the complex nature of embedded technology in a way that is both witty and wise.

Hello World contains genuinely helpful information about the myriad workings of the web, ranging from email to chat rooms, and it also acknowledges that we are not all comfortable with the technology. One of the most entertaining sections of the book simply consists of a list of worries, doubts and fears about the Net, drawn from responses to a trAce survey of UK writers and the Internet and presented without comment. The list is exhaustive and perhaps because of this, it also becomes a curiously moving account of the fear that technology can induce. To balance this, however, Sue has included some beautiful net haikus, and best of all, a hilarious account of cybersex.

Hello World draws both on Sue's own extensive experience as a creative writer, and her equally extensive cyberlife experiences, and she generously shares the many insights she has gained. It is an accessible and engaging book that informs and inspires, and most importantly, it is written without a trace of condescension. For that alone, it should reach the widest possible audience.

February, 2004.

http://www.rawnervebooks.co.uk/reviews.html

Posted by Sue Thomas on Feb 29, 2004 at 07:45 AM in ~ Reviews | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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Technobiophilia: Nature and Cyberspace

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Categories

  • 00 About the book (2)
  • 00 About the web view (1)
  • 00 Acknowledgements (2)
  • 00 Cover (1)
  • 00 Foreword (4)
  • 01 Imagining (5)
  • 02 Hello World (3)
  • 03 Shapes (4)
  • 04 Geographies (4)
  • 05 Bachelard (2)
  • 06 Thoreau (3)
  • 07 Links (3)
  • 08 Electricity (1)
  • 09 The Indian Pacific (1)
  • 10 Growing up (3)
  • 11 Riding the train (1)
  • 12 The lived body (5)
  • 13 Skin (1)
  • 14 Where are we? (5)
  • 15 Food and money (2)
  • 16 Anxiety (3)
  • 17 Worries (2)
  • 18 Infection (3)
  • 19 Addiction (1)
  • 20 Nullabor (2)
  • 21 Exposed (1)
  • 22 Sex and greed (2)
  • 23 Turned inside out (1)
  • 24 Wastelands (1)
  • 25 Settlement (1)
  • 26 Home (1)
  • 27 Cultivation (1)
  • 28 More (1)
  • 29 Coast Starlight (3)
  • 30 Death Valley (3)
  • 31 Virtuality (2)
  • 32 Sunset Boulevard (2)
  • 33 Our country (12)
  • Nature and Cyberspace (1)
  • ~ Articles & Papers (1)
  • ~ Conferences, Workshops, & Talks (7)
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  • ~ Future Research (1)
  • ~ Online MA in Creative Writing & Technology (2)
  • ~ Reviews (11)
  • ~ Win a copy [archived] (2)
  • ~ Writing and the Digital Life (6)
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