| J.A.M. - Is Hybridism the main 
                    category of our culture?
 Katherine Hayles – I 
                    wouldn’t say hybridism was the main category of our 
                    culture, but I would say that is a very important one. And 
                    we see in many different areas, and in many different manifestations. 
                    For example, in the United States almost everyone thinks of 
                    themselves as having a hybrid identity, they’re African-American, 
                    they’re Euro-American, they’re Mexican- American, 
                    and so the idea of hybridity is, in fact, part of the American 
                    identity. But, I think beyond the case of America, the notion 
                    of hybrid identity is a very popular political idea now. And 
                    I suppose in part it could be seen as a reaction against the 
                    memories of fascism and purity, so hybridity 
                    takes on a kind of political cache, that positions it self 
                    in opposition to notions of purity in particular. J.A.M. – 
                    Creolization, Hybridism, Complexity- we always have been moved 
                    by these words. Which movements are arising from these categories? 
                    What kind of community they are producing? 
                   K. Hayles – I 
                    think hybridity has traditionally been associated with the 
                    monstrous. If you think about the way that the renaissance 
                    depicted monsters, they were combinations of different animals, 
                    for example with the Chimera or the Griffin, or classical 
                    monsters like that. So the traditional idea of hybridity has 
                    been to combine into one being, or creature, these dispread 
                    parts that have very different traditions. So, it is closely 
                    allied to the monstrous, and so, people who adopt hybridity 
                    as a political program, often proclaim themselves monsters, 
                    or mongrels. And for them, the monstrous or the mongrel is 
                    not a term of denigration, but they adopted as a term of pride. 
                   J.A.M. – Is the “patchwork 
                    girl” a model of what you consider the configuration 
                    of subjectivity?
 K.Hayles – “Patchwork 
                    girl”, electronic hypertext by Shelly Jackson, is a 
                    good example of this philosophy of the monstrous, so in that 
                    fiction as you know, Shelly Jackson rewrites Mary Shelly’s 
                    “Frankenstein” story. But she takes the female 
                    creature that Victor Frankenstein creates, at the male monster’s 
                    insistence, (and you remember in Mary Shelly’s story, 
                    the male monster essentially tells Victor that he is going 
                    to blackmail him if he doesn’t create this mate for 
                    him, but Victor has second thoughts and he tears the female 
                    monster up before he completes her), and in Shelly Jackson’s 
                    work, the female monster (who is composed like the male creature, 
                    of dispread people parts, from dispread people, and even from 
                    animals), proclaims herself a monster, but her very hybridity 
                    is a sign of strength. What 
                    it means for subjectivity, of course, is that the subject 
                    is not seen as a unified or autonomous being, but literally 
                    in her case is composed of many different subjectivities, 
                    and she has passages in that text where she relates this not 
                    only to the special case of the female monster, but more generally 
                    to the mixed biological inheritance of humans. So she 
                    mentions the fact which modern biology has recently discovered 
                    that human DNA contains animal DNA, and even plant DNA, and 
                    so she makes the point that on a biological and a molecular 
                    level we are all hybrids. So she posits this not as the exceptional 
                    case but the standard case, and the fiction, the illusion 
                    then becomes that some how we are unified.  J.A.M. –Technological 
                    forms of life operate as interfaces of humans and machines? 
                    An hybrid of organic and technological–hyperfiction 
                    deal with rather technological forms of life, than with organic 
                    forms of life? K.Hayles – I’ll 
                    just say a little bit more about this because it ties in with 
                    some of the questions about technology. As you probably know, 
                    in the world of cognitive science, a very similar model has 
                    been adopted. For example, in computer science and cognitive 
                    science, very similar models have been adopted such as Marvin 
                    Minsky’s societies of mind, where he imagines human 
                    cognition not as a unified soul, not as a unified rational 
                    soul, but as autonomous agents, each of which is running in 
                    its own independent program, and so in Minsky’s view, 
                    “I have an agent that is telling I’m hungry, and 
                    I have another agent that is telling me I want to go to sleep”, 
                    and my conscious mind is not really in control of the situation, 
                    is making up stories to convince itself it’s in control, 
                    but much of my behaviour is in fact arising from the programs 
                    this individual agents are running. I wont try to say here 
                    whether or not I think Minsky is correct in that, I will just 
                    point out the fact that its striking, that across very different 
                    areas we see similar ideas be advanced, probably for different 
                    reasons. For Shelly Jackson it’s a political and a feminist 
                    program, to advance the idea of hybridity, for Marvin Minsky 
                    it’s not political or feminist program, it’s a 
                    computational program that he wants to advance, but it does 
                    indicate, I think, a really significant shift away from notions 
                    of unity, autonomy, individuality into notions of hybridity, 
                    mixtures, mongrelism, and its seems that the more radical 
                    elements of culture, they are trying to foment change within 
                    the culture, are adopting this idea of hybridity as a potent 
                    idea that can change some of the status quo.  J.A.M. – 
                    Can you tell the differences between biological and non-biological 
                    forms of life? Does Technology bring distance to these forms 
                    of life? K. Hayles – My comments 
                    on hybridity perhaps get you in the context for this specific 
                    kind of hybridity that I was talking about here in Portugal. 
                    And that is hybridity that joins the technological and the 
                    human, or specifically that joins the intelligent machine 
                    with the human, and I understand that your statement is that 
                    we can touch and be close to the biological, and that the 
                    technological always exists at some distance from us, but 
                    I would say a couple of things in response to that:
 One of the things I would say is that for 
                    most people in the contemporary world, we experience nature 
                    trough the technological. For example in the United States 
                    we have huge amounts of ground that are set aside as national 
                    parks, and many people regard these national parks as reserves 
                    of nature, and in a sense they are, but they’re also 
                    highly artificial. There’s a 300 page manual that dictates 
                    what kind of activities can go on in this natural area, so 
                    it’s a highly, social and regulated space, and it’s 
                    also increasingly a technological space. How do the park rangers 
                    manage the wild animals through technological means, for example. 
                    But you don’t need to get to the parks to experience 
                    this. We look around us, and we see what it looks like a natural 
                    scene but much of what we see around, is also been managed 
                    and completely permeated with technology, from things like 
                    genetically modified foods, or selective breeding for animals… 
                    and so I 
                    think it’s no longer possible to distinguish a nature 
                    for us that is remove from technology. Technology interpenetrates 
                    the natural at every point, more and more so. If for example, 
                    you are a couple, and you want to have a child, that would 
                    seam to be a very natural act, your engaging and a fundamental 
                    biological process of reproduction. But think of the many 
                    ways in which technology now intervenes in that process: controls 
                    it, directs it, modifies it, from ultra sound to regulated 
                    birth procedures, to vaccinations, on up. I think the technological 
                    and the natural now are not just side-by-side, they’re 
                    interpenetrating one another, so that when we touch the natural 
                    we are, in fact, also touching the technological. That’s 
                    one though.
 And now, the second though is that, dough humans 
                    have a long evolutionary history of biological organisms, 
                    which determines, in my view, much of our brain structure, 
                    much of our physiology, much of our physical responses to 
                    the world like our sensory systems, nevertheless from almost 
                    the beginning of the species as a species, the tendency of 
                    humans has been to create technology. And so, you would have 
                    to say that there is something in humans as they’re 
                    biologically evolve, that makes them extraordinarily adaptive 
                    and appropriative of technology, so in this sense I think 
                    you could argue that, to be technological is natural for human. 
                    If 
                    you had no technology and you were a human, you would be in 
                    an extremely unusual state compared to most of humanity, so 
                    in that sense to, technological devices are not foreign to 
                    us, they’re part of our nature. J.A.M. – 
                    Narratives without beginning and end are still narratives? 
                    How can we argue for the power of narrative and, at the same 
                    time, disdain the poetics of narrative?  K. Hayles – Well, I 
                    would distinguish between narrative and story. And narrative 
                    I wont try to define here in our limited time, but I would 
                    agree that narrative is essential to all cultures that I know. 
                    I’ve talked to anthropologists about this, and they’ve 
                    given me a few examples of small tribal cultures that do not 
                    use narrative. But I’m persuaded by the research that 
                    Jerome Bruner reports in his little book called “Acts 
                    of Meaning”, where he reports on research, of researchers 
                    who recorded how many times mothers told their small children 
                    stories, and they tell them stories continuously, as many 
                    as 10 or 12 per hour, and the stories might be very short 
                    and simple like: “now we’re going to get dressed, 
                    then we’re going to go to the park, and than we’ll 
                    have fun, and then we will have an ice cream cone”; 
                    but as you say it’s still narrative. So I take your 
                    point that narrative is an essential way in which, at least 
                    western cultures make meaning. Narrative 
                    is pervasive and it’s essential to meaning making. It’s 
                    one of the important ways that we make meaning not just in 
                    fiction or in literature that we read, but in everyday discourse 
                    and everyday lives. But when I use the word story, what 
                    I mean is, a narrative that is recognised as a meaningful 
                    unit within a culture. And so we know from Aristotle and western 
                    culture, stories have beginnings, middles and ends. A fundamental 
                    characteristic of stories: this temporal sequence and temporal 
                    progression, as well as the sense of causality that unites 
                    the events being told in the narrative. And if a narrative 
                    does not fallow that cultural pattern, people within the culture 
                    may have trouble as recognising it as a meaningful story. 
                    But all the time artists are pushing the boundaries of what 
                    can count as a meaningful story. All the time they are taking 
                    chances, trying to take risks, invent new ways to tell stories. 
                    So what counts as meaningful story is not actually static 
                    from Aristotle to the present, it’s always undergoing 
                    change, transformation, and those may be subtle or they may 
                    be larger changes. In our contemporary period it seems clear 
                    from Lyotard, and many others, that there is been a general 
                    decline of belief in grand narratives, that the great stories 
                    that held together, the story of progress, etc… now 
                    evoke scepticism. People don’t believe them. They see 
                    them as instruments of imperialism, and ways to oppress colonial 
                    peoples, and so for it. So we’ve seen a general decay 
                    of the grand narratives, and it’s within this context 
                    that I would place hypertext fiction, because hypertext fiction 
                    does not usually, in my experience, abandon narrative. What 
                    it does is abandon the large narrative and instead it uses 
                    much smaller sequences. Now in part this is an artistic problem, 
                    because if you are going to see control over sequence to the 
                    reader, then you can script smaller sequences. But you cannot 
                    script the entire narrative, because narrative is sensitively 
                    dependent on the order in which things are told, and to read 
                    things in a different order is literally to read a different 
                    story. And so, consequently, there’s a move away from 
                    an attempt to tell one continuous story. And why would writers 
                    want to move away from telling one continuous story? In part 
                    this actually relates back to the idea of hybridity and the 
                    fragmented subject. If 
                    you have hybrid fragmented subjects, then it doesn’t 
                    make sense that you can corral all of these hybrid creatures, 
                    serving as characters in one big story, then would brake up 
                    into many stories. But I think there is a different and 
                    distinct aesthetic effect, which is nevertheless still an 
                    aesthetic effect, and in my experience a powerful one, and 
                    it works like this, whereas say in traditional novel by Dickens, 
                    you’re following perhaps many characters, but they’re 
                    all progressing more or less along the same chronology. You 
                    see how the pieces fit together, and they all go together 
                    to make one big story. In hypertext narrative, they’re 
                    many different pathways and what happens is instead of a slow 
                    progression, linear progression trough the events, you get 
                    at first what it seems like many pieces of a jigsaw puzzle, 
                    and there’s a certain amount of frustration involved 
                    because you don’t know if the pieces will fit together. 
                    But in the wiry moving works, there are connections between 
                    the pieces, but your realisation of what connections are, 
                    comes much later then in a traditional fiction, where as you 
                    progress, you are building the connections. But nevertheless 
                    when you have thought about and explored the hypertext space, 
                    something like coherence emerges, and it’s can not be 
                    told as a linear story. It’s not a kind of coherence 
                    that can be narrated as “this happen, and then this 
                    happened, and then this happened”. Rather it’s 
                    a coherence that is a kind of chaotic coherence: You have 
                    the sense of the hole, but the sense of the hole is almost 
                    inarticulatable, because anyone pathway that you choose to 
                    re-narrate the story, as a literary critic for example, seams 
                    to you completely contingent, there would be a thousand other 
                    ways to talk about this fiction. And so when I wrote my article 
                    on “Patchwork Girl”, it took me a long time to 
                    write that, because I was so intensely aware of the contingency 
                    of any order I would use to talk about it. I thought I new 
                    what the fiction was about, but to communicate that to a reader 
                    I had to use a linear sequence, because wrote it in that fashion, 
                    and it was extremely difficult. Much more difficult than if 
                    I was talking about a novel that was sequenced in an ordinary 
                    way, but still I would say: Do you call it a grand narrative? 
                    Is that coherence a grand narrative? I’m not sure is 
                    a grand narrative. It’s more like it’s a sense 
                    of realised coherence, or actualised coherence. It doesn’t 
                    really manifest itself to me, and I cannot tell at this someone 
                    else as a grand narrative, because of this sense of contingency. 
                   J.A.M. – 
                    What happens in the story when the narrative is fragmented? K. Hayles – Well, I 
                    think that one of the things that happens is the reader has 
                    to do considerably more work to make out of this fragments 
                    a meaningful story. So more freedom, but also more responsibility 
                    is given to the reader than in a traditional story. And also, 
                    it seems to me that in electronically literature, in particular, 
                    very few of the works are long narratives. They combine narrative 
                    with theory, with philosophy, with image, and so there’s 
                    less of a sense that one is telling the story than that one 
                    is presenting a bunch of material that the reader can synthesise 
                    in different ways. And so, perhaps there is a decline of the 
                    story though, not, I would say a decline of literature. And 
                    maybe that leads us to the question: Are we seeing the death 
                    of literature?  J.A.M. – 
                    when you talk about the superposition of text without analogy 
                    with any kind of literature, what are you talking about? Are 
                    you talking about the end of literature? K. Hayles –I feel very 
                    strongly that we are not seeing the end of literature, but 
                    rather a different way to make literature. And we in the academy 
                    often associate literature with avant-garde works. But in 
                    fact there is a vast reading public that reads very traditional, 
                    even formulaic pieces of fiction, especially harlequin romances 
                    in the United States. And so, the range of literature is vast 
                    but even for the avant-garde, I think that what we’re 
                    seeing is a period of tremendous innovation and experimentation. 
                    Not the end of literature at all, but rather an expansion 
                    of literary possibilities.  J.A.M. – 
                    How do you see the relation between national literature and 
                    the process of globalisation? K. Hayles – Well, the 
                    electronic literature is an interesting context in which you 
                    ask that question, because the World Wide Web makes it easy 
                    to disseminate literature across national boundaries, and 
                    many texts are now posting multiple language versions at the 
                    Site. In fact I understand your own book is available in English 
                    as well as Portuguese on the web, so it seems to me that electronic 
                    literature is a powerful force to create a global flow of 
                    literature. I don’t think nationality is left behind. 
                    I think that national concerns continue to be reflected in 
                    literature but there seems to me that much a dialog in conversation 
                    trough electronic literature, in particular between different 
                    national literatures, and therefore they become more in conversation 
                    with each other.  J.A.M. – Can you tell us what is the comunification 
                    of narrative?
 K. Hayles – This 
                    is a term that was coined by Tallan Memmot in his work “Lexia 
                    to Perplexia”, where he coins a neologism comunification, 
                    which seems to me that put together comodification and communication. 
                    And this is in the context of the World Wide Web, where, (let 
                    us say for example that you have a literary organisation that 
                    you’re trying to promote, and you put up a Web Site, 
                    or you have a literary journal online and you put up a Web 
                    Site, but it takes some money to buy a server, and it takes 
                    some money to keep the Site current, and so you decide that 
                    you will allow carefully chosen advertisers to display banners 
                    at your Site, then you are in fact creating a comunification) 
                    it is a communication, but the communication is presented 
                    simultaneously with comodification, trough the advertising 
                    that becomes a pervasive force on the Web. I think that’s 
                    the sort of phenomenon that Memmot was gesturing toward by 
                    coining that neologism “comunification”, the joining 
                    of a comunification technology with a comodification. And 
                    in fact, I was at a presentation the other day on the Internet 
                    2, which you may have heard about, the new ultra high-speed 
                    backbone that’s being pioneered by universities across 
                    the globe, and what they’re calling the first Internet 
                    now, is Commodity Internet. And they’re trying to create 
                    a research based Internet, so they call one the “Commodity 
                    Internet”, and the other, the “Research Internet”. J.A.M. –Biology 
                    has profoundly disturbed our metaphysics – Somehow “Archaic” 
                    survives within ultra technology. What does this means? K. Hayles – Well, it 
                    seems to me undeniable that the archaic survives in our bodies, 
                    that we have plysticine brains. Brains that evolved in a specific 
                    evolutionary context, and have not changed significantly in 
                    the last thousands and thousands of years of recorded history, 
                    which is only a very small span compared to our entire evolutionary 
                    history. So 
                    we carry in our bodies this sedimentic history and always, 
                    I think, there is a conflict, and a negotiation between our 
                    evolutionary history, or biology, and forces of culture, including 
                    technology. So, take an area like Los Angeles, where I 
                    live for example, it’s a huge megapolis of 13 000 000 
                    people, and yet, in this huge megapolis we see young people 
                    form into gangs, which have much in common with tribal structures 
                    of adolescence. And so, why do we have the phenomenon of gangs 
                    when they’re not living in a tribe, they’re living 
                    in this megapolis? I think the answer to that is ruddity and 
                    our evolutionary history and patterns of biology that have 
                    been with us for a long, long time. So, what this means to 
                    me is that on one hand we have this very agile neo-cortex, 
                    that is constantly inventing new technological forms, on the 
                    other hand we have other systems in our brain, like our Limbic 
                    system or our Vesticular system which are ancient, which are 
                    evolved much, much before neo-cortex. So right along with 
                    these hi-tech forms, we have this plysticine behaviour patterns 
                    that we inherited, and so there’s a mixture, always 
                    I think, of negotiation between the neo-cortex and the Limbic 
                    system, that we invent the hi-tech artefacts, but the uses 
                    to which these hi-tech artefacts are put, are some times dictated 
                    by archaic patterns. And so, I think the archaic is not so 
                    much build into the technological artefact itself, but the 
                    archaic persists in the cultural and biological context in 
                    which those artefacts are used. For example, why do Americans 
                    like to seat in front of a TV when commercials are on, and 
                    other absolutely mindless content? Well I think it has something 
                    to do with the fact that the TV screen is a flickering light. 
                    And through evolutionary ions, humans have liked to seat around 
                    the fire as a kind of comfort source, and so many people will 
                    keep the TV on, even with the sound turned off, just to a 
                    have a flickering light while they’re reading or something 
                    else. So, that would be an example of a hi-tech artefact that’s 
                    being perhaps put to uses that are archaic. J.A.M. – 
                    And finally, for both Peirce and Vattimo, self is constructed 
                    biologically in the translative/interpretative process. Is 
                    connecting thought signs with interpretants in an open ended 
                    chain of the semiosis? Is still for you idealistic, this semiotic 
                    point of view? K. Hayles – Yes, I do 
                    think that material culture is enormously important in understanding 
                    the construction of subjectivity at any given period. As academics 
                    we largely live in the world of ideas and in the world of 
                    words, and we come to place perhaps a dispertion at faith 
                    in words and ideas. We 
                    think that words and ideas make a difference in the world, 
                    and in fact construct our world. But try talking to an 
                    anthropologist. An anthropologist will not talk first about 
                    words and ideas. An anthropologist will talk first about things 
                    like transportation rows, artefacts, material culture, and 
                    from the point of view of an anthropologist it’s these 
                    factors which largely determine social culture, not just words 
                    and ideas. And I, of course, I too believe that words and 
                    ideas are important. In the academy I work with words and 
                    ideas all the time, but I must say, in the last few years 
                    I’ve been increasingly persuaded by the arguments of 
                    the anthropologist, that material culture is, if not largely 
                    determined, very importantly determined of social patterns. 
                    Change the material culture and you change the patterns. I’ll 
                    give you a quick example: every teacher knows that the material 
                    arrangement of the classroom is crucial to the classroom dynamics. 
                    Change the way the chairs are arranged and you change how 
                    the ideas and the words are used. Or to elaborate on that 
                    example, every architect knows that the kind of space creates… |