The discoverers of the Internet borrowed key metaphors of philosophical and
literary discourse—virtual reality comes from Bergson's theory of
consciousness, hypertext, from narrative theories of
intertextuality—which were then regarded as the exclusive property of the new
media. The Internet also took over elements of pastoral imagery and "Western"
genres (e.g., the global village, homepages and the frontier mentality). The new
media redefined the architecture of space with a "superhighway," villages and
chatrooms—all evidence that the Internet foregrounds pastoral suburbia and the
romance of the highway and domestic morality tales over the ruins of the
metropolis. E-mail, however, offered the possibility of instant intimacy; the
more distant the correspondents, the more intensely they shared their innermost
secrets in all late-night languages.