Electronic literature and the effects of cyberspace on the body
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Publication date
2014
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Purdue University Press
Citation
Zalbidea, Maya; and Sotelo, Xiana. "Electronic Literature and the Effects of Cyberspace on the Body." CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture 16.5 (2014): <https://doi.org/10.7771/1481-4374.2489>
Abstract
In their article "Electronic Literature and the Effects of Cyberspace on the Body" Maya Zalbidea and Xiana Sotelo discuss how new technologies are facilitating the emancipation of subjugated subjects aimed at transforming unequal social relations through an intersectional and performative approach. This perspective is discussed through the exploration of the so-called intersectional approach described by Berger and Guidroz, Haraway's situated knowledges, and Butler's performative agency based on transgressions. Framed within the posthuman, post-biological deconstruction of social and cultural hierarchies, Zalbidea and Sotelo argue for the value of a conjuncture between postcolonial post-modern/post-structuralist literature and the field of feminist cultural studies. Based on previous theories of gender and bodies in cyberspace, Zalbidea and Sotelo develop ideas about bodies, gender, and anxieties, and how these theories may be illustrated metaphorically in electronic literature and new media art works.