Abstract Reading literature is often contrasted to the use of digital media in terms of speed. While readers engage slowly with a book, they rush through digital environments at an ever faster pace. This article argues against a simple binary between slow/literary and fast/digital. This binary is in fact not native to the public debate about literature in the digital age but can be traced back from the digital revolution to modernist attitudes on literature, as they emerge in Viktor Shklovsky and Walter Benjamin. Drawing on results about reading speed in reading science and on current narrative theory, this article devises an alternative argument for literary reading as a process that unfolds over multiple time scales linked to dif...
The article is an exploration of online reading from the perspective of theories of reading and inte...
Drawing on the considerations of Karlheinz Stierle, who claims that one of the key tasks in thinking...
This paper analyses major social shifts in reading by comparing publishing statistics with results o...
ABSTRACT In this article I present an overview of the major changes in the literary field due to the...
Using the form of dialogue, this paper analyzes reading in the digital age. The paper reveals the hi...
Comparison study analyzing the novels’ ambivalent responses to modernist technology. See argues that...
Rather than turning away from speed readers because of their surface involvement in the equation ‘fa...
The paper explores the phenomenon of speed in literature as radically represented within the framew...
New technologies are changing our reading habits. Laptops, e-readers, tablets and other handheld dev...
Speed reading applications such as Spritz isolate individual words from bodies of text and display t...
The article describes new phenomena in the field of literature that have developed under the influen...
The Digital Affect is an exploration of ways to improve the teaching of reading and writing using di...
Recent ideas about reading in literary criticism have centered around a fundamental question: what a...
International audienceBased on the experience of the junior research group “Berlin intellectuals 180...
Literature has stood the test of time, though there were many changes in its form. It truly reflects...
The article is an exploration of online reading from the perspective of theories of reading and inte...
Drawing on the considerations of Karlheinz Stierle, who claims that one of the key tasks in thinking...
This paper analyses major social shifts in reading by comparing publishing statistics with results o...
ABSTRACT In this article I present an overview of the major changes in the literary field due to the...
Using the form of dialogue, this paper analyzes reading in the digital age. The paper reveals the hi...
Comparison study analyzing the novels’ ambivalent responses to modernist technology. See argues that...
Rather than turning away from speed readers because of their surface involvement in the equation ‘fa...
The paper explores the phenomenon of speed in literature as radically represented within the framew...
New technologies are changing our reading habits. Laptops, e-readers, tablets and other handheld dev...
Speed reading applications such as Spritz isolate individual words from bodies of text and display t...
The article describes new phenomena in the field of literature that have developed under the influen...
The Digital Affect is an exploration of ways to improve the teaching of reading and writing using di...
Recent ideas about reading in literary criticism have centered around a fundamental question: what a...
International audienceBased on the experience of the junior research group “Berlin intellectuals 180...
Literature has stood the test of time, though there were many changes in its form. It truly reflects...
The article is an exploration of online reading from the perspective of theories of reading and inte...
Drawing on the considerations of Karlheinz Stierle, who claims that one of the key tasks in thinking...
This paper analyses major social shifts in reading by comparing publishing statistics with results o...