id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_qcabkc2qcfhmhfduo6uoc6xs2i Jenell Johnson How We Think: Digital Media and Contemporary Technogenesis by N. Katherine Hayles 2014 4 .pdf application/pdf 1816 93 51 How We Think: Digital Media and Contemporary Technogenesis N. Katherine Hayles, How We Think: Digital Media and Contemporary Technogenesis. to traditional, print-based scholarship, and a demonstration of how its analytical affordances can help us to think differently about texts, as well as the scholars who say, human—cognition, but exited convinced that the titular "we" really means "humanities scholars." Hayles opens the book with a call for a field of comparative media digital humanities scholars can come together to explore synergies between print the relationship between print and digital approaches to the humanities more generally. and changing nature of writing on the web, they do so through particularly traditionally organized texts and print books. Alan Sondheim's Writing Under: Selections from the Internet Text, while still published in a traditional print format, better approximates these theories of the nature of digital writing and text in its exploration of both the process and the products ./cache/work_qcabkc2qcfhmhfduo6uoc6xs2i.pdf ./txt/work_qcabkc2qcfhmhfduo6uoc6xs2i.txt