Noting that in the genre of fiction, hypertext authors have expressed a desire to jettison or transcend the limits of narrative, Ayers and his associate authors of this World Wide Web hypertext wish to resist such a desire. An "electronic historian," Ayers refuses to submit to the temptation to "explode the narrative" in his writing; here, instead, he argues that extended narrative will benefit electronic text, offering it cohesion (in local strands of narrative extending from the main thread) and coherence (in the tropes of traditional storytelling). The "Valley Project" is an experiment in such: a main narrative offers hypertextual links to subordinate strands of narrative and to digitized versions of primary historical artifacts themselves. Recounting the story of two villages-- Staunton, Virginia, and Chambersburg, Pennsylvania--in their experience of the Civil War, Ayers uses the metaphor of the endnote citation to allow the reader to arrive at a "landing": direct access to a source (which might be a simple secondary reference, the roster of an entire regiment, a ten-year series of newspapers, or collections of manuscript diaries and letters) without the intermediary of a specific reference. Ayers announces his intent, ultimately, to include video and audio nodes as well, so that readers can view battle re-creations, hear music recordings, and see photograph details, all of which will simultaneously enliven the reader's experience of the material and tax the hardware capabilities of the user's system. As of this writing (21 April 1995), the project has few such links under construction, but nonetheless, once the considerable tasks of scanning and hard-wiring data sources are further along, could provide students of history an alternative and pedagogically sound contextualization of the Civil War period--a contextualization not unlike those that George Landow proposes in Hypertext: The Convergence of Contemporary Critical Theory and Technology (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1992). The author hopes that "readers will be tempted to construct their own narratives, connecting things we have not thought to connect, coming up with ideas that eluded us, adding to the ongoing construction of this history." (J Paul Johnson.)


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Michael Hancher

Department of English, University of Minnesota

URL: http://umn.edu/home/mh/ebibjpj2.html

Comments to: mh@umn.edu

Created 29 April 1995

Revised 31 August 1996