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In page N. Katherine Hayles:

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The structure of the printed book, Writing Machines itself as an artist book, or "technotext" embodies Hayles's contention that how we receive information determines our thinking about the information, as Jan Baetens explains: "material structure which not only helps us to think and write, but which determines our thinking and writing in every possible way".[1] Baetens is Emeritus Professor of Cultural Studies at KU Leuven, known for his interdisciplinary work in word-and-image studies.[citation needed] He notes that "Maybe the most interesting thing about Writing Machines, however, is its 'ars poetica' dimension, that is the fact that the book not only says what it does, but also does what it says".[citation needed]