Biography
Nancy Katherine Hayles is an American scholar who focuses on the interconnections "between science, literature, and technology". Originally a research chemist in the 1960s, she then earned her doctorate in English literature and became a distinguished professor. In the humanities, her work, How We Became Posthuman (1999) is a seminal foundation for posthumanism. In literary criticism, she is most notable for her contribution to the fields of literature and science, particularly American literature. Throughout her work,, Hayles has examined how humans interact with technology and media. She explores how digital technologies affect humanities research. As one of the early and leading scholars of electronic literature, Hayles introduced digital literature concepts to a generation of scholars and writers in the 1990s through her courses for the National Endowment of Humanities.
Works

Electronic Literature
2008

My Mother Was a Computer
2005

Writing Machines (Mediaworks Pamphlets)
2002

How we became posthuman
1999

La Evolucion del Caos
1993

Chaos and Order
1991

Chaos bound
1990

The cosmic web
1984

How we think

Nanoculture

Writing machines

Eighth day

Unthought

Transmedia Frictions

Postprint - Books and Becoming Computational

Science Fiction
Sexual disguise in Cymbeline
Sexual disguise in Cymbeline
1980
Comparative Textual Media
Comparative Textual Media
Bacteria to AI
Bacteria to AI