THE WORLDWIDE ‘COCOON’: ‘ALT [C]LIT’  
NARRATIVES AND POSTHUMAN (INTER)  
CONNECTIVITY  
LA ‘CRISÁLIDA’ MUNDIAL: LAS NARRATIVAS  
DE LA ‘ALT [C]LIT’ Y LA (INTER)CONECTIVIDAD  
POSTHUMANA  
VANESA MENÉNDEZ CUESTA  
Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University (Japan)  
Abstract  
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This article explores notions of womanhood and youth through new paradigms  
that stimulate the proliferation of novel posthuman identities and subjectivities.  
The Internet becomes the juncture where these material and virtual realities exist.  
Understanding communication as a continual flux of digital data that constantly  
crosses the boundaries in and out of the World Wide Web, I set out to examine  
how contemporary writing and literary forms, in particular the poetry of ‘Alt  
[C]Lit’ authors such as Ana Carrete, Sarah Jean Alexander and Mira Gonzalez,  
are redefined by mediated new technologies, such as social media, and how this  
influence also converges with making visible new epistemologies about identity,  
gender and human relations nowadays.  
Keywords: interface, interconnectivity, gender studies, posthumanism, North  
American poetry.  
Resumen  
Este artículo busca explorar nociones de feminidad y juventud a través de nuevos  
paradigmas que estimulan la proliferación de nuevas identidades y subjetividades  
post-humanas. Internet se convierte en la coyuntura en la que estas realidades  
tanto materiales como virtuales existen. Entendiendo la comunicación como un  
continuo flujo de datos digitales que constantemente cruza los límites dentro y  
fuera de la red informática mundial, me gustaría proponer cómo la escritura y las  
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formas literarias contemporáneas, en particular la poesía de las autoras ‘Alt [C]  
Lit’ como Ana Carrete, Sarah Jean Alexander, y Mira Gonzalez es definida por la  
influencia de nuevas tecnologías mediadoras, como las redes sociales, y cómo este  
hecho confluye con la visibilización de nuevas epistemologías sobre identidad, el  
género y las relaciones humanas hoy en día.  
Palabras clave: interfaz, interconectividad, estudios de género, post-humanismo,  
poesía norteamericana.  
1. Introduction  
In the American TV sitcom Broad City, the episode “The Worldwide Bloodstream”  
shows protagonists Abbi and Ilana spending a whole day inside their apartment,  
so absorbed by their computers that they do not realise how much time they have  
spent doing this activity. The different sequences of this first scene parody the  
amount of time people usually spend in front of either their computers or mobile  
phone screens, procrastinating by endlessly browsing gossip websites, watching  
viral videos, searching through mobile dating apps, and so forth. After a while,  
both Abbi and Ilana return to reality after their phone alarms sound. They are  
shocked to realise that they are still together in the same room: in other words,  
they became so immersed in the Internet that they did not remember that so  
much time had passed, sharing the same space inside the darkness of their living  
room. After such a shocking moment of awareness, Ilana exclaims, “We were so  
tapped into the worldwide bloodstream, we fell into the literal Matrix” (Glazer  
and Jacobson 2015). This quote refers to the title of the episode, “The Worldwide  
Bloodstream”: the creators of the series, by the using the word “bloodstream”,  
instead of the more common expression “Web”, suggests an anatomical-biological  
connection to the virtual, through which we navigate digitally and get mentally  
trapped as a form of dissociation from our materially corporeal existence, as if the  
World Wide Web sucks our lives dry like an immaterial vampire-like entity.  
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Using concepts from cultural anthropology and cyberfeminist theory, such as  
Remedios Zafra’s (dis)connected room (2012) and netianas (2005) and Paula  
Sibilia’s post-organic man (2006), Gilles Lipovetsky’s global screen (2009) and  
the social problematics of hikikomori’s isolation, this study aims to expose how  
online ‘Alt Lit’ poetry reflects current trends in society and culture, particularly  
in the United States. Additionally, this research will explore how these social and  
cultural influences impact the production of literature and other artistic artifacts  
which cross the boundaries between the Cartesian dichotomies of the material  
and the virtual, the human and the artificial, the mind and the body and the like.  
Moreover, I would like to explore how these dichotomies blur their limits and  
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question the very notion of difference and binary systems. To do so, I will use  
an interdisciplinary and comparative approach in which the visual works of artists  
Tetsuya Ishida, Polly Nor and Laura Callaghan will be drawn into conversation  
with the poems from Alt Lit authors such as Sarah Jean Alexander, Ana Carrete  
and Mira Gonzalez. I have included these visual works as part of the online cultural  
background that inspires the poetic work of ‘Alt [C]Lit’ authors.  
The works of Alt [C]Lit poets are an example of the paradoxical position of  
Millennials as a liminal generation lingering between the material reality and a  
virtual existence that both connects them to a world while isolating Millennials  
from it. Alt [C]Lit is a concept first used by Australian writer Emmie Rae in a 2014  
article about the rise and fall of Alt Lit, a community of self-promoting writers and  
independent editors who wrote about Internet culture and literature during the  
early 2010s. As a result of numerous sexual-abuse scandals and accounts of sexist  
attitudes among prominent male figures of the community, female writers decided  
to split and form an independent community of only female writers, poets and  
editors, currently known as Alt [C]Lit. This article includes the poems of the most  
representative Alt [C]Lit poets such as Ana Carrete1 (Baby Babe, 2012), Sarah Jean  
Alexander2 (Wildlives, 2015) and Mira Gonzalez3 (I will never be beautiful enough  
to make us beautiful together, 2013). Their work has been published in online and  
printed zines, such as Shabby Doll House (2012), founded and edited by Lucy  
K. Shaw4 (WAVES, 2016) and Sarah Jean Alexander; and Illuminati Girl Gang  
(2011-2014), which was curated by Gabby Bess5 (Alone With Other People, 2013),  
another poet associated with the Alt [C]Lit sphere. A close reading of their works  
of poetry will be employed in this paper to analyse, illustrate and problematise the  
paradox of isolated living in a hyper-connected society that relies heavily on both  
the immaterial and the ephemeral of the virtual.  
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2. A Room of Their Own: Interconnectivity and Isolation  
in Internet Communities  
The room —either a living room or a bedroom— has become the nexus between  
that which is virtual and reality, connecting our private lives with the projection of  
our existence into the digital. As Zafra claims, the concept of a “connected room  
of one’s own” theorises the impact of the ‘screen’ as the ‘quintessential window’  
through which “the room oscillates between the double dimension of space and  
place” (2012: 480, emphasis in original), reminding us of Augé’s concept of “non-  
places” (1996) as temporary intersectional spaces for anonymous human relations  
in constant movement. But Zafra goes a step further by suggesting that the ‘room’  
conditions the formation of alternative and constantly updating subjectivities  
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outside the traditional social spectrum by creating “bonds of belonging” instead  
of excluding through “social networking”. The room, according to Zafra, will be  
“a concrete place because it contains memories”, where we can “build an identity”  
through “virtual routes and margins” (2012: 480) that make us stay connected  
and return to that particular online place.  
An example of how enclosed domestic spaces, identity and online lives are radically  
intertwined is the figure of the hikikomori. In Japan, hikikomori often deal with  
their loneliness by opting out, like hermits, totally withdrawing into their rooms.  
A group of sociologists have argued that the existence of such isolated and anti-  
social people has been stimulated by the manifold ways in which online media  
technologies enable individuals to lead a normal life alone, “making it possible  
to live without going out” (Kato et al. 2017: 209), which makes isolation more  
feasible and accessible to anyone. It seems that Kato finds a reason to explain this  
phenomenon directly: the addiction produced by technology becomes a kind of  
soothing coping mechanism to face the emptiness created by real or imaginary  
social withdrawal. However, Japan is not the only nation that has developed this  
social problem due to the omnipresence of media technologies in our daily routines  
all over the world. According to a report from YouGov,6 the sense of loneliness felt  
by US Millennials is rated as higher than previous generations: “[…] they have  
no acquaintances (25% of Millennials say this is the case), no friends (22%), no  
close friends (27%), and no best friends (30%)” (Ballard 2019). The study also  
states that there are a series of factors that contribute to this inability to bond  
with other people: one of these factors is “shyness (53%)” whereas a 27 percent  
of Millennials claim not to need friends at all or have “any hobbies or interests”  
to share with a particular community of friends (Ballard 2019). This has recently  
increased because of the social distancing imposed by most governments around  
the globe since the COVID-19 pandemic.  
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These new forms of social isolation were also depicted by Japanese artist Tetsuya  
Ishida (born in 1973, Yaizu) in an image described as follows by the Gagosian art  
gallery:  
The work depicts a young man —perhaps a likeness of the artist— seated at a  
computer. In place of a mouse, a disembodied finger attached to a black wire points  
toward a square hole in his desk, from which a minuscule staircase leads downward  
into darkness. The subject’s spine has sprouted branches, which burst through his  
T-shirt, and he seems to be turning toward us as if to speak, with an expression that  
is part dismay, part resignation. (Gagosian 2022)  
This image can be associated with that of the hikikomori, the one that Broad City  
also brilliantly depicts: the physical disintegration of the anatomical body, which  
is virtually absorbed by a liminal space, specifically the online realm. Like Ishida’s  
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painting of a robot-man, a hybrid humanoid made up of ears morphed into a  
mobile phone while carrying on his shoulder a man dressed in white, working  
impassively on his computer (Ishida 1996). Therefore, the priority of the world  
going on behind our computer screens is what Lipovetsky described in The Global  
Screen as “screencracy”, which is defined as “a flow of images that transforms the  
hypermodern individual into Homo pantalicus […]” (2009: 270, my translation).7  
As he argues, due to the technological shift the Internet has brought into our  
lives, “there is a will of the subjects to take over the screen and the tools of  
communication” (274, my translation).8 Hence, the boundaries between material  
and virtual communication are ‘decentralized’ (273) and have been appropriated  
by users by becoming a by-product of individual expression.  
Sibilia speaks about the post-organic man as the new humanistic ideal to transcend  
this fleshly prison-(cell), as Socrates once referred to the body in Plato’s Phaedo,  
and how this new paradigm has replaced the concept of the hypermodern man.  
Finally, the soul —our subjectivity— has found a way to eliminate the burden of  
its bodily existence at least momentarily by employing the virtual. This is what  
Sibilia argues in the following extract: “As it happens in the ‘angelic’ tendencies  
of the cyberculture and tele-informatics, with their proposals of the immortal  
mind through artificial intelligence and the overcoming of the physical space  
through the virtualisation of the bodies in the data network […]” (2006: 118,  
my translation).9 As she explains further, the quest for the hypermodern man is to  
search for the “ethereal and eternal ‘essence’” by employing “artificial intelligence  
and biotechnologies” that contribute to “cut off life by separating it from the  
body” (118, my translation).10 This is what Deleuze and Guattari defined as the  
“body without organs”: “The BwO is what remains when you take everything  
away. What you take away is precisely the fantasy, significance, and subjectification  
as a whole” (2005: 151). This form of disembodying the mind —our subjectivity—  
from its fleshly carcass, responds to this accelerating form of identity formation  
online. The battle between the mind and body has intensified in recent years due  
to the proliferation of various technologies, including biological procedures and  
the expansion of the Web, through which this Cartesian dichotomy has been  
exploded to unimaginable limits: plastic surgery; Photoshop programs; Snapchat,  
Instagram and other app filters; and so on. As Sibilia puts it, the “technologies  
of the virtual and immortality” are affecting our “subjectivities and bodies” since  
the first ones have created a “new way of understanding and living the limits of  
space and time” (2006: 68, my translation).11 Since time and space have been  
redefined by these innovative technologies, we are still reconfiguring our notions  
of being and living in the current times, which are determined by hectic, fast-  
paced developments which are surpassing, somehow, our human abilities to cope  
with reality.  
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3. Alt [C]Lit Poetry: The Netiana Paradox and Lyrical  
Virtuality  
As described above, the traditional notions of positioning oneself in space and  
time have been dramatically challenged by the emergence of virtual realities, which  
proliferate the online sphere. This is what Sarah Jean Alexander (1988, Baltimore)  
melancholically proposes in the poem “You by way of me” (2015). The title of  
the poem suggests that a connection established between people is conditioned  
by our positions regarding others. Locating the body in both time and space is  
determined by the hypervisual, as stated in the following lines:  
If you look at the moon at midnight  
And I look at the moon at 7 PM,  
We will be on the opposite sides of the Atlantic  
Staring at the same spot in space. (2015: 32)  
In the lines above, Alexander points out that the dematerialisation of bodies does  
not imply a disconnect with our position in space and time, but an expansive  
possibility for transgressing the very notions of subjectivity and engaging with  
others. The time zones stated in “at midnight” and “at 7 PM”, which make two  
people “look at the moon”, from “the opposite sides of the Atlantic” (32) are a  
clear allusion to the “abstraction of existence” that Lipovestky points out in The  
Global Screen, which originates from the “advanced process of derealization” at  
the same time that “a decorporalized and desensualized universe” (2009: 276, my  
translation)12 is expanding as a result of how the body stops being a reference for  
reality and material existence. As Alexander suggests in her poem, people prefer  
interacting through a screen, a reference that is implied in the line “staring at  
the same spot in space” (2015: 32). This line acknowledges that one’s presence  
online has become the epitome of existing: we are stared at, therefore we exist;  
as if Alexander twists into contemporary terms Descartes’ famous lines. In the  
purest Cartesian sense, our subjectivities transcend our bodily existence in ground-  
breaking ways. But, at the same time, the voice of the poem is aware of how this  
can exponentially become a threat, as it follows:  
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No one ever tells you to stare at the sun.  
That would be dangerous. It would hurt too much  
But if we are being honest with each other,  
Isn’t this supposed to? (2015: 32)  
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At this point in the poem, Alexander seems to be reflecting on one of the primary  
effects that Alt Lit literature attempts to achieve through writing: showing how  
the Internet allows the artificial performativity of what A.D. Jameson calls ‘New  
Sincerity’, which consists of a simulated display of honesty on behalf of the author;  
honesty being understood as “the illusion of transparency, of direct communication  
[...] by means of artifice” (Jameson 2012). Considering that Alt Lit is a literary  
movement that originated in a highly artificial medium —that of the Internet— its  
authors long for the authenticity and naturality which is currently missing from  
social media, and actively react against the literary legacy of postmodern irony and  
cynicism.  
In Alexander’s poem, the “sun” stands as the metaphor for illuminating as a means  
of achieving truth, as Plato stated in his allegory of the cave: “The ascent for the  
upward journey of the soul into the region of the intelligible; then you will own what  
I surmise; since that is what you wish to be told. […] In the world of knowledge,  
the last thing to be perceived and only with great difficulty is the essential Form  
of Goodness” (Plato 1941: 231). As Alexander also states in her poem, honesty,  
understood as one’s truth, can “be (so) dangerous” for even others that “it would  
hurt too much” (2015: 32). This means that revealing our true, naked, honest  
selves can potentially harm others while this form of revelation of oneself inflicts  
pain on oneself. That is why our online persona is just an idealised projection of  
the self: the truth is always too ugly to be freely and openly revealed to others,  
because it may cause pain in an uncontrolled and unexpected way. According to  
Han, these new media and forms of communication “dismantle” the “relation  
with the different”, since the processes of “virtualization and digitalization” make  
any real opposition “disappear eventually” (2017: 43, my translation).13 With the  
Internet, mediated phantasies are closer to becoming our immediate reality.  
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In the chapbook Internet Girls (2014) by Ana Carrete (1988, San Diego), which  
was also published in the Alt [C]Lit magazine illuminati girl gang (vol. 4 2014),  
one can find the prototype of what Zafra called Net(i)Ana(s). This is a generation  
of “posthuman and immaterial” women, an “alternative theoretical figuration of  
the Internet subject” that transgresses “the frontiers of gender, class and race” and  
“creates new questions on ways of being and relate to the online universe” (Zafra  
2005: 23, my translation).14 What Zafra tries to explain is that the virtual world has  
opened the door, at least theoretically, for exploring subjectivity and finding ways  
of subverting realities through the new languages available on the Net. These new  
forms of construction of the immaterial are directly connected to the production  
of the “immaterial”, “desire”, “meaning” and “affection and emotivity” according  
to Zafra (2005: 148). Similarly, at least in the first lines of this long poem in the  
form of a chapbook, these “internet girls” Carrete speaks about are similar to  
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the ones Zafra calls netianas, since both terms allude to the creation of affective  
networks through the virtual medium:  
and hello hi internet  
girls  
come to mama  
haha just thought  
about deleting that  
and typing ‘cum 2  
mama’ instead but  
whoa that’s dumb  
just kidding hey sup  
what is shaking  
internet girls […] (Carrete 2014: 1)  
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What makes Carrete’s poem so relevant for this analysis is that she acknowledges  
that girls conform to a relevant group of participants in the online sphere. Also,  
it is interesting to notice that the language employed is like that used in Internet  
chat rooms or apps, which is evident in the use of informal terms: “hi”, “mama”,  
“cum”, “sup”; and exclamation words like “haha”, which expresses laughter;  
“whoa”, which shows surprise; and “hey”, which is used to draw someone’s  
attention. This kind of language is typical of conversations, which have now been  
translated into digitised textual formats, through instant messaging conversations,  
which attempt to reproduce discourse phonetically by these exclamations and try  
to imitate spoken expressions. This creates a sense of spontaneity and improvisation  
that is intensified using the apparent lack of content in sentences and the irrelevant  
triviality depicted through them, mimicking a daily-life conversation. This artificial  
display is directly connected to Jameson’s claim on Alt Lit New Sincerity, which  
depicts the poet as a real person in an artificial context such as the online one. At  
the same time, the lines “hey sup/ what is shaking internet girls” (2014: 1) show  
a need to connect with others, a need to reach out to someone like her in the  
immense vastness of the World Wide Web: a group of girls bonding that reminds  
one of the importance of human relations, even when these are transformed by the  
mediation of the Internet in our daily lives, as well as in our intimate interactions.  
It can be said that the “internet girls” that Carrete speaks about in her poem  
have an identity of their own, which can be associated with or even included in  
one of Zafra’s netianas. This is because “the visual-digital” has become a “new  
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power location, connected to the body as an inscription field of socio-symbolic  
codes which converges with the machine” (Zafra 2005: 23, my translation).15  
Therefore, these digital media make gender a more complex construction which  
is mainly developed in an online context (2005: 22-23). According to Jaquet-  
Chiffelle and his group of researchers, contemporary identities are a complex topic  
to deal with since the proliferation of new subjectivities online has affected the  
way one perceives a subject: “On the Internet, it can be hard to know if the entity  
we are interacting with is of flesh and blood, or only digital. We are now facing a  
complex reality both in the ‘real’ world and in the information society. We have  
to deal with subjects acting behind masks” (2009: 78). For this very reason, their  
research on the polymorphous nature of contemporary identities is categorised into  
two main ones: “physical” and “virtual (or abstract)” entities (80). Also, Jaquet-  
Chiffelle’s study points out the conceptualisation of the “mask” as role-playing  
through which “virtual persons” (82) perform and even develop an alternative  
identity parallel to their material presence.  
How language is displayed by users on the Internet is also an important point  
to consider when one reads Carrete’s works. In another of her self-published  
chapbooks, Why Fi (2014), there is the poem “404 NOT FOUND”, which is full of  
Internet imagery, and perfectly poeticises the hybrid condition of the postmodern  
individual, a sort of prophecy turned into reality: the dystopian fantasy that Haraway  
wrote about in A Cyborg Manifesto, originally published in 1984. In Haraway’s  
text, the cyborg identity is presented as a “creature in a postgender world” (2016:  
8) that transgresses the thin boundary between human and animal and gracefully  
sneaks out of the “distinction between animal-human (organism) and machine”  
(11). Ethereal, invisible, cryptographic, the cyborg identity becomes an alternative  
future to the collapsing totalitarian-identity system we remain immersed in now. As  
Haraway argues, the “informatics of domination” is implicit in the transition from  
“an organic, industrial society to a polymorphous, information system — from  
all work to all play, a deadly game” (28). This cyber-hybridisation of the organic  
with robotics is reminiscent of the paintings mentioned in the previous section  
by Ishida, whose work is full of examples of the mechanisation of human beings  
for the benefit of capitalistic exploitation and repression: workers are represented  
as isolated machines that repeat routines and working processes until exhaustion.  
In the poem “404 NOT FOUND”, Carrete displays computing’s dominion over  
Millennials’ existence as how computers function, as it is shown at the beginning:  
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open a tab and type loading  
turn airport off  
page fails  
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turn airport on  
loading my love life on the internet  
chemicals happening getting excited about the world  
wide web that cocoons me  
cosy warm wide web  
long silky envelope (2014: 4)  
The language employed mixes Internet terminology with lyricism to make the  
following statement: the boundary between the virtual world and the real one is  
becoming blurry. The pull of the online world is so strong that the average amount  
of time a person spends in front of a computer with Internet access has been  
increasing over the years. According to many reports, people use social media an  
average of “more than six hours a day”, according to a report made by Hootsuite  
and We Are Social (Jiwani 2019). In this sense, one can remark on the extreme  
importance the Internet has on people’s lives. The Internet’s influence on our  
way of understanding the world and how we interact with it are closely connected  
at the same time. The title itself, “404 NOT FOUND”, refers to an HTTP  
standard response code indicating that the client could not communicate with a  
given server. Still, the server could not find what was requested: it usually appears  
when a user attempts to follow a broken or dead link. This phenomenon is exactly  
what happens in the poem, which describes in detail many people’s routines when  
getting in front of their computers or mobile devices: “opening a tab”. A “tab” is  
a computer interface used for navigating web pages, and where you “type” a web  
address for “loading”. But the speaker playfully types “loading”, disabling the  
airport connection to have access to a wireless signal; nonetheless, the “page fails”  
(Carrete 2014: 4). Then, the poet describes the process of enabling the airport  
connection again, which is switching off the Internet connection. In this sense, the  
poem leads us toward a stream of consciousness in which the poetic voice reflects  
on Internet addiction as if it were a toxic verbosity of intimacy. This linguistic  
display of our intimacy is connected to how people feel comfortable making their  
personal lives public through various online media platforms, such as Facebook or  
Twitter.  
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As Mira Gonzalez (1992, Los Angeles) co-authored Selected Tweets (2015) with  
Tao Lin, one of the big names in the Alt Lit scene, early social media was an  
unspoiled territory for experimenting with first-person narratives about one’s life  
with the expectation, and even fear, of not being attractive enough to engage  
the audience: “I’m already confused as to what I’m supposed to tweet about.  
My life isn’t interesting” (Gonzalez 2015: 2). This is supposed to be the first  
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tweet with which Gonzalez started her official Twitter account in February 2010.  
Nevertheless, she uses this first tweet as the introduction to her collection Collected  
Tweets. This example shows how the autobiographical and the use of social media  
as a literary medium converge to reinforce the display of New Sincerity in the Alt  
Lit movement.  
This need for authenticity seems to be a nonsense motivation that fills the actual  
need to share whatever belongs to the real world and our personal lives across  
the World Wide Web, as it is stated in Carrete’s poem: “loading my love life  
on the internet/ chemicals happening getting excited about the world” (2014:  
4). Afterwards, the voice compares the Internet to a “cocoon”, which can be  
interpreted as the comparison to a spider that weaves their webs to lure their  
victims, and then captures them by wrapping them with silk, forming a cocoon:  
“long silky envelope”. This predatory and captivating effect the Internet has on  
the poet is compared to the effects that Stockholm syndrome has on its victims.  
This effect is reflected in the line “this short envelope that protects me from spam”  
(4). The protective “short envelope” embodies how the Internet makes her feel,  
and this is also described as “cosy warm”. This image of the World Wide Web  
as a cocoon that traps you like the spider web catches its prey reminds one of  
“Stuck on You” (2015) by Polly Nor (1989, London), in which evil red tentacles  
reach out from a computer screen to rock a floating body that holds a phone in  
her hand, symbolising our emotional co-dependency with technology and that  
which is virtual. This shows the attraction that the Internet world exerts on people.  
“Spam” has some connotations apart from being the unsolicited emails people  
receive every day, like certain viruses or bacteria that are sexually transmitted  
through unprotected sexual practices. This can be deduced from the close position  
between the words “spam” and “babies” (Carrete 2014: 4), suggesting that the  
Internet somehow prevents people from having sex in the real world, mainly due  
to the wide access to pornographic content for free that controls libidinal impulses:  
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long or in my case short envelope  
short envelope that protects me from spam  
and babies are us newsletters i don’t have any  
babies someone make me unsubscribe  
these emails are making me want some  
turn airport on and land on my wait  
unbutton my tabs  
use cursive script on my stomach  
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turn airport on and off and on and off  
and on again (Carrete 2014: 4)  
The struggle between the real and the virtual is stated in “someone makes me  
unsubscribe/ these emails are making me want some” (4), followed by enabling  
the airport connection again and landing “on my wait”. These lines seem to refer to  
people’s tendency to be constantly distracted by their mobile phones while waiting  
for the bus or the train in the “non-places” that Augé mentions. Furthermore,  
the process of hybridisation between physical and virtual identity turns out to be  
interpreted as a metaphor for cyber-sex: “turn airport on and land on my wait/  
unbutton my tabs/ use cursive script on my stomach” (Carrete 2014: 4). These  
two lines represent this struggle of constantly living offline and online, compared  
to the sexual desire of total union of two separate entities: the one between human  
and the online persona.  
Following Zafra’s ideas, the mediation of the screen as “an interface” that “liminally  
join(s) our bodies to online relations” and becomes the “‘necessary’ appendixes of  
our habitation in a connected world” (2015: 16). What seems more evident is that  
Haraway’s vision of the hybridisation between the human and cyborg is made by  
the mediation of computer and mobile devices as platforms through which we are  
connected. This is what Zafra has described as a need for “participat[ing] in the  
space that it generates with its own vital experience, committing it in a space that  
symbolically identifies it, which it considers its own” (2015: 25). Furthermore,  
Carrete also seems to explore this sickening longing for the virtual to live in her  
poem “y2k” from Baby Babe (2012), in which the author expresses her concerns  
about the dystopian possibility of the disappearance of technology from our lives  
as a tragedy:  
122  
if computers stopped  
working i would seriously  
consider this  
masochistic  
ongoing desire  
and replace  
my eyes with marbles (2012: 49)  
In this poem, two facts can be analysed: the first one is the possibility of a virtual  
apocalypse, in which “computers” would undergo another Year 2000 Problem  
miscelánea 72 (2025): pp. 111-127 ISSN: 1137-6368 e-ISSN: 2386-4834  
The Worldwide ‘Cocoon’: ‘Alt [C]Lit’ Narratives  
or Millennium Bug, also known as “y2k”, which consisted of a computer bug  
associated with the inability of most computer software programs to distinguish  
between the year 1900 and the year 2000. Carrete employs this computer bug as  
a metaphor for understanding the emotional dependency that Millennials have  
on computers and the need to be constantly connected online: “if computers  
stopped/ working i would seriously/ consider this/ masochistic/ ongoing  
desire” (49). Carrete seems to establish a parallelism between a “masochistic  
ongoing desire” (49) and Internet addiction, a fact that is evident in the power  
dynamics established between Haraway’s ‘Informatic domination’ and the gradual  
submission of people to it, since, as Braidotti stated, “technology” has become  
“a material and symbolic apparatus”, “a semiotic and social agent among others”  
(1996: 348) in contemporary societies.  
The poem ends with two interesting lines that bring to mind Zafra’s concept of  
ocularcentrism: “and/ replace my eyes with marbles” (Carrete 2012: 49). Zafra  
defines ocularcentrism as the way of perceiving and knowing about the world  
through the domination of the eyes: the power of the visual to validate and  
interpret reality (2018: 45). As the “machines of seeing” allow the possibility of  
creating a “new form of power over subjects and bodies” (49, my translation),16  
this is actually what is displayed in our digital devices and diverse social media.  
Zafra names this “online culture”, which is defined as “the cohabitation and  
construction of a world and subjectivity through the screens in a context of visual  
excess (image, information, data …)”. This results in a new form of “cognitive or  
informative capitalism” (39, my translation)17 that, according to Zafra, is what  
measures our social and digital interactions throughout the World Wide Web, and  
particularly evident, in social media networks.  
123  
In the poem, Carrete seems to notice the importance of the politics of seeing  
digital images, of being connected through the eyes to the screen of our devices to  
consume culture, which is also emphasised in the image included in this book that  
immediately follows the poem: a blank eye, no pupil with no iris, just a teardrop  
falling from the lacrimal duct. This conjures the image of Medusa turning her  
victims into stone, just as the blank screen turns our eyes into “marbles”, unable  
to see outside the digital. Another popular online illustrator, Laura Callaghan  
18(1991, Belfast), has portrayed Millennial culture through her colorful and  
detailed illustrations, like the one described above, in which a girl is surrounded  
by her laptop, mobile phone and other technological devices. Like Polly Noir’s  
and Callaghan’s illustrations, Carrete’s image and poem emphasise the impact of  
technology on younger generations’ lives to the point of becoming embodied, as  
it happens more radically in Ishida’s work, as part of the body and the subjectivity,  
and conditioning how Millennials interact with their environment.  
miscelánea 72 (2025): pp. 111-127 ISSN: 1137-6368 e-ISSN: 2386-4834  
Vanesa Menéndez Cuesta  
At this very moment, one can imagine how most Millennial poets populate the  
Internet as a horde of cyber-spiders, in a way reminiscent of Carrete’s poetic  
image, who, 24 hours a day and all year long, non-stop, weave and spin their texts  
throughout the Net, hunting readers through their sticky web(s) like predators. At  
the advent of this digital revolution, Alt [C]Lit’s writing has actively contributed to  
the posthuman strategies of interconnectivity that also influence new realities and  
epistemologies that result from the proliferation of new subjectivities. Therefore,  
one cannot still ignore the fact that the intricacies of the Big Web that constitute  
our immediate socio-cultural legacy make it more than evident that the Internet,  
and more concretely, online writing, is the legitimate heir(ess) and successor of  
those (wo)men who spun, weaved, knotted and embroidered their stories, their  
narratives, their experiences, their emotions into the loom of history, literature and  
the arts, in the liminal joint between the material and the immaterial.  
4. Conclusion: Futurities  
Traditional notions of positioning oneself in space and time have been dramatically  
challenged by the emergence of virtual realities populating the online sphere. With  
the Internet, mediated fantasies are closer to becoming our immediate reality.  
Since time and space have been redefined by diverse innovative technologies, we  
are still reconfiguring our notions of being, living and positioning ourselves in the  
world. These notions are determined by hectic, fast-paced developments and also  
surpass, somehow, our human abilities to cope with reality.  
124  
As discussed earlier, Alt [C]Lit poets have exposed their concerns as a part of the  
Millennial generation about the challenges of a society that relies on the virtual  
in almost every sphere of life. By providing their voices to express themselves in  
new ways: the simulation of the author’s authentic self and honesty through the  
creation of an online persona, as it happens in Sarah Jean Alexander’s poems; or  
by reproducing and adapting the language employed on social media platforms to  
experiment with new forms creating narratives about the self, as happens with Mira  
Gonzalez’s tweets. All this poetry, particularly the work by Ana Carrete, exposes the  
yearning to belong to a community by employing the Internet and its possibilities  
for socialisation, but also denouncing the dangers behind relying too much on  
the virtual, as it makes us more dematerialised, displaced and disconnected than  
genuinely connected emotionally and physically.  
Therefore, the use of poetic metaphors concerning Internet imagery has been  
analysed to describe how this use of the virtual, as a limit of the material and  
the immaterial, is affecting our notions of identity, for which Zafra’s concept of  
netianas will be employed to explore how the Internet subject problematises not  
miscelánea 72 (2025): pp. 111-127 ISSN: 1137-6368 e-ISSN: 2386-4834  
The Worldwide ‘Cocoon’: ‘Alt [C]Lit’ Narratives  
only fixed categories of being, such as gender, class and race, but also re-configures  
posthuman immateriality. Conceiving the screen as a liminal interface that connects  
our corporeal materiality to the virtuality of human interactions, as Zafra claims,  
how mediation works will be presented as a key element to understand the Alt Lit  
poetry in the ‘connected room(s)’ that we all inhabit nowadays.  
Notes  
1. Born in 1986.  
2. Born in 1987.  
3. Born in 1992.  
4. Born in 1987.  
5. Born in 1992.  
6. YouGov is an international research firm of data analysis on public opinion:  
125  
7. “[...] entre la pantalla tamaño sello y la megapantalla gigante circula sin cesar una flota de  
imágenes que transforma al individuo hipermoderno en Homo pantalicus e instaura una pantallocracia  
cuyo poder temen ya algunos”.  
8. “[...] una voluntad de los sujetos de reapropiarse de las pantallas y los instrumentos de  
comunicación”.  
9. “Como ocurre en las tendencias ‘angélicas’ de la cibercultura y la teleinformática, con sus  
propuestas de inmortalidad de la mente mediante la inteligencia artificial y de superación del espacio físico  
a través de la virtualización de los cuerpos en las redes de datos […]”.  
10. “[...] proyectos como los de la inteligencia artificial y las biotecnologías revelan sus  
frágiles cimientos metafísicos, que cercenan la vida al separarla de una “esencia” etérea y eterna”.  
11. “Las subjetividades y los cuerpos contemporáneos se ven afectados por las tecnologías de  
la virtualidad y la inmortalidad, y por los nuevos modos que inauguran de entender y vivenciar los límites  
espaciotemporales que estas tecnologías inauguran” (emphasis in original).  
12. “[...] se denuncia el crecimiento de una existencia abstracta, informatizada, sin vínculo  
humano tangible. Conforme el cuerpo deja de ser el asidero real de la vida, el horizonte que se perfila es  
el de un universo fantasma, un universo descorporeizado y desensualizado”.  
13. “También los nuevos medios y las nuevas técnicas de comunicación desmantelan cada  
vez más la relación con lo distinto. [...] La virtualización y la digitalización hacen que lo real que opone  
resistencia vaya desapareciendo cada vez más”.  
14. “NETIANA: sujeto posthumano e inmaterial que n(h)ace en Internet. Figuración teorética  
alternativa del sujeto en red. Ficción política que rebasa las fronteras de género, clase y raza y que sugiere  
nuevas preguntas sobre las formas de ser y de relacionarnos en el universo on line”.  
15. “En su deriva por el territorio Internet, esboza nuevas preguntas y desafíos feministas  
que se acercan a lo visualdigital como a una nueva localización del poder, al cuerpo conectado como a  
un campo de inscripción de códigos sociosimbólicos que converge cada vez más con la máquina [...]”.  
miscelánea 72 (2025): pp. 111-127 ISSN: 1137-6368 e-ISSN: 2386-4834  
Vanesa Menéndez Cuesta  
16. “[...] las máquinas de ver crean un nuevo mundo, mejor dicho, un nuevo poder sobre los  
sujetos y cuerpos en el mundo”.  
17. “Esteescenario,alquellamarécultura-red,vienedefinidoporlaconvivenciayconstrucción  
de mundo y subjetividad a través de las pantallas en un contexto excedentario en lo visual (imagen,  
información, datos ...). Contexto caracterizado en un marco donde conviven formas de capitalismo  
cognitivo o informacional con otras formas de economía social que surgen desde la ciudadanía”.  
18. Laura Callaghan’s website: <https://www.lauracallaghanillustration.com>.  
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Received: 14/08/2024  
Accepted: 29/05/2025  
Accepted: 11/07/2025  
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.  
miscelánea 72 (2025): pp. 111-127 ISSN: 1137-6368 e-ISSN: 2386-4834