Cover, R.2008-08-142008-08-142006New Media and Society, 2006; 8(1):139-1581461-44481461-7315http://hdl.handle.net/2440/47382This article examines the ways in which recent theorizations of interactivity work to reconceive the author-text-audience relationship. Suggesting that all media forms - historical and contemporary - can be reconceptualized in light of recent understandings of interactivity, it is argued that control over the text and its narrative as mythically ‘finished’ products is struggled over between an authorial desire for finality and an audience desire for control over the arrangement, (re)configuration and (re)distribution of the text. This struggle takes place across the sites of technological developments of textual control versus full interactivity, and in the realms of both media theory and media law.enAudience Inter/Active: Interactive Media, Narrative Control & Reconceiving Audience HistoryJournal article00200819362008081411344310.1177/14614448060599220002354852000072-s2.0-3294446707742462