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VII:37.  In this “late age of print” writers are tantalized by the potentiality of programming (pro-writing) which may allow cooperative, co-creational interaction with their own works. [LATE] This is a potentiality which is already some part of the experience of all readers and writers, but it has typically been seen as allied with the (radical, subversive, occasional) practices of writers who are, at times, characterized as “innovative”. If the language-based textualities of cyberspace are not drowned out in the coming audio-visual deluge, they promise to internalize a new, but (strangely, theoretically) familiar form of literacy for a much broader community of reader-writer-programmers. [AV]
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