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James - hybridity | ||||
James' hypertext weds content and design in ways that merge the textual and the visual. Using Adobe Photoshop, James has created a header graphic representing the tensions between privacy and protection. A series of watermarks visually signal to readers that they are at particular areas of the hypertext. In this way, James deploys a technique of visual rhetoric that Hocks (2003) calls "hybridity." Key elements of the color palette even shift from blue (screenshot 2) to red (screenshot 3), depending on whether the reader is engaging arguments "for" or "against" the TIA program.
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abstract | background | theory | praxis | models | course
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#FFFFFF, #000000,
& #808080: Hypertext Theory and WebDev in the Composition Classroom Michael J. Cripps, York College, City University of New York |