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This
essay reads a work of electronic literature that
does not display code onscreen but which intervenes
in discussions of code vs. screenic text in
electronic literature criticism. Young-hae Chang
Heavy Industries's Nippon presents a juxtaposition
of English and Japanese onscreen, an aesthetic of
deconstruction that promotes a similar critical
approach to examining the boundary between onscreen
text and programming code. Instead of addressing
what code does for our readings of electronic
literature, I argue that works like Nippon prompt
us to consider what electronic literature does for
our readings of code.
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