
 
This page features links to books, book reviews, papers, projects, courses, resources and other sites helpful in understanding the varieties and cultural implications of oral and written communication from the beginnings of human history to the present computer age.



- Fin Bostad, Writing in Virtual Space
- Doug Brent, Oral Knowledge, Typographic Knowledge, Electronic Knowledge: Speculations on the History of Ownership
- Daniel Chandler, Biases of the Ear and Eye
- Jen Clodius, Orality in a Text-Based Community
- John December, Characteristics of Oral Culture in Discourse on the Net
- Dennis Donoghue, Orality, Literacy and their Discontents
- Robert M. Fowler, How the Secondary Orality of the Electronic Age Can Awaken Us to the Primary Orality of Antiquity
- Robert M. Fowler, The Fate of the Notion of the Canon in an Electronic Age
- Bernard Hibbitts, Coming to Our Senses: Communication and Legal Expression in Performance Cultures
- Bernard Hibbitts, Making Sense of Metaphors: Visuality, Aurality and the Reconfiguration of American Legal Discourse
- Michael Joyce, The Ends of Print Culture
- Nancy Kaplan, Politexts, Hypertexts, and other Cultural Formations in the Late Age of Print
- Don Langham, The Common Place MOO: Orality and Literacy in Virtual Reality
- Richard A. Lanham, The Implications of Electronic Information for the Sociology of Knowledge
- Bobby Loubser, Orality and Literacy as Media in the New Testament
- Steve Mizrach, From Orality to Teleliteracy
- J.C. Nyiri, The Humanities in the Age of Post-Literacy
- Shirley Roburn, Literacy and the Underdevelopment of Knowledge
- Cynthia Selfe, Redefining Literacy: The Multilayered Grammars of Computers
- Donald Theall, Beyond the Orality, Literacy Dichotomy: James Joyce and the Prehistory of Cyberspace
- John Tolva, The Heresy of Hypertext: Fear and Anxiety in the Late Age of Print




