In “The Virtual Community”, Rheingold offers a heartfelt tribute to
+In “The Virtual Community”, Rheingold offers a heartfelt tribute to
intimacy and affection through web- based interactions which, at the
time, were unheard of. He struggles in his efforts to highlight the
legitimacy of his connections, finding no way to do so except by
emphasizing their tangible bodily experiences. The community’s claim to
authenticity thus had to lie in the physical experiences of its members—
the visible bodies and hearable voices, the weddings, births, and
-funerals (1993). You’re dreaming again,
-good.
Would you feel closer to me if you could hear my voice?
Is
-my voice a sound? Could it be a feeling?.
You’re dreaming again, good.
Would you feel closer to me if you
+could hear my voice?
Is my voice a sound? Could it be a
+feeling?.
Even then, and even by people with no interest in undermining the value of the virtual, the distinction between physical and virtual was confusing. Rheingold himself reinforces the boundary of body relations diff --git a/print/print_style.css b/print/print_style.css index 792f517..b59e2b5 100644 --- a/print/print_style.css +++ b/print/print_style.css @@ -17,6 +17,15 @@ src: url('../fonts/webfonts/Platypi-Italic.woff2'); font-weight: bold; } +@note-area { + float: bottom; + float-reference: page; + width: 100½; + max-height 80%; +} +notes{ + position: note(sidenotes); +} @media print{ @page{ size: 130mm 180mm; @@ -32,7 +41,18 @@ position: relative; text-align: left; font-size: 7pt; - } + } + @left-top { + content: element(sidenote, all-once); + padding: 5mm; + } + @note-area { + content: element(sidenotes, all-once); + float: top right; + float-reference: page; + width: 42mm; + margin-right: -30mm; + } } @page:left { /* bleed: 3mm 0 3mm 3mm; */ @@ -60,11 +80,16 @@ width: 5mm; } } - } +} a{ text-decoration: none; color: #000; } +.sidenote{ + position: note(sidenote); + margin-bottom: 10px; + text-align:left; +} .margin-note{ font-size: 7pt; line-height: 3mm;