The otherness of cyberspace, virtual reality, and hypertext vis-a-vis the traditional

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Open House International Association

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info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess

Abstract

This article engages with the question of the otherness of cyberspace, VR, and hypertext, and how they are distinguished as new from the traditional. It begins by noting how this new present is distinguished by familiar binary oppositions like now vs. past and modem vs. traditional which rely on the notion of a new that is uncontaminated by the old. Both our enthusiasm for the singularly liberating nature of this new future as cybertechnophiles, and our Luddite resistance to its singularly fascistic and panoptic encirclement are similarly informed by this binary opposition. The paper then notes how the other in this opposition is a domestic other. Thus we always-already know what the other is oil about. Arguing that if the other were radically other and not domesticated, one could not give an account of it in this way, the paper concludes that such alterity requires a rethinking of how one knows the other. The difference between this wild other and the domestic other is not an exfernal difference but is radical; it is at the root. Therefore, our notions of space, reality, and text need to be complicated and rethought to accommodate what they seem to oppose: cyberspace, virtual reality, and hypertext.

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spacing, alterity, differance, supplement, worlding

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Open House International

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Volume

32

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1

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