Index
The Book
A Bit of Barthes
Modernism
Postmodernism
Decentred
Author Options
Hypertechniques
Bibliography
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In "The Rhetoric of Hypermedia", Landow gives examples of six types of overviews which may be useful in a hyperbook (09 - 94) :
The Graphic Concept Map organises ideas, authors, terms, or other concepts in a hub and spoke pattern. This illustrates the influence peripheral concepts have on the concept in the centre.
The Vector Flow Chart presents directed lines connecting nodes, representing "lines of influence or causal connection" (91). The length of the lines may be used as a measure of the strength or importance of the influence.
Timelines allow for concise chronological organisation. Natural Object overviews consists of anchors superimposed on pictures, maps, technical diagrams, etc.
Outlines "add a graphic component to text by breaking up the flow that characterises discursive prose" (91).
Source text may act as its own overview in networks which are dominated by a central node or nodes. Landow's example is a poem with hypertext commentary.
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by Scott Spicer. [email protected]
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