Main Article Content
Sep 14, 2018
Abstract
The different textual manifestations show the changes that humanity is going through, and in recent decades, new textualities have appeared originated in computer technology and make sense only in cyberspace. This paper tries to describe how the concepts of text and discourse have been theoretically addressed in the last decades of the 20th century, as well as the main features of hypertext and multimodal discourse, representative of a new society: cyberculture.
Downloads
Policies for open access journals
Authors who publish here accept the following terms: Authors will keep their copyright and will guarantee the journal the right to the first publication of their work, which will be subject to the Licence of Creative Commons acknowledgement, which allows for the use of this material only if the authorship is credited and the original source is acknowledged (the journal’s URL), and if it is not used with commercial ends and with any derivations of the original work.
Authors may adopt other non-exclusive license agreements of distribution of the published version (e.g. to save it onto a digital institutional archive or publish it in a monographic volume) only if the initial publication of this journal is indicated.
It is permitted and recommended for authors to divulge their work on the Internet (e.g. institutional digital archives or webpage) before and during the submission process, which may lead to interesting exchanges and increase the citations of the publication. (See Open Access Effect).