Partially inspired to do some of this archival work by running across Michael Bérubé''s blog. Bérubé is one of my favorite progressive thinkers, one of the most productive scholars in English Studies, and he has a keen sense of humor. His blog is a kind of live cultural studies notepad. He's made an impressive effort of making his essays available online. It makes a great deal of sense to me that more people are doing this -- online is the logical place for scholarly discourse to take place. Bérubé, who has written in the past about the role of the "public intellectual," is putting his text where his public is.
If Bérubé hasn't left me with enough reading to get caught up on, there was exciting news last week that Wordcircuits has published a new hypertext by Milorad Pavic, the Serbian author of the print hypertexty novel The Dictionary of the Khazars. The new hypertext is titled The Glass Snail and is described as "a haunting hypertext tale of two people brought together by a shared compulsion."