Cutler, Betsy2017-04-242017-04-242010-04-29etd-05122010-080848http://hdl.handle.net/10919/77474There is a tradition of experimentation in fiction. From Laurence Sterne’s <u>Tristram Shandy</u> to B.S. Johnson’s <u>The Unfortunates</u>, we see an exploration in content and delivery of story. In Sterne’s <u>Tristram Shandy</u>, he uses tactics such as drawings and deletion of pages. In Johnson’s <u>The Unfortunates</u>, he shifts control to the readers by giving them the opportunity to shuffle sections of the book. Here, as the reader, you have a choice. You can read <u>Treatment Plan</u> as it is arranged, or you can jumble the sections labeled with an image in any order within the dated sections. What must remain in order are the sections that begin with a date. The book is a medical-model case study fashioned in experimental fiction. The cropped images which indicate the shuffled sections were taken of two stained glass windows at Salisbury Cathedral in the United Kingdom. *Please note that <u>Treatment Plan</u> is meant to be read in its printed form which consists of twenty four sections, twelve of which may be shuffled within the dated sections.*en-USIn CopyrightexperimentalhospitalfictionTreatment PlanThesishttp://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05122010-080848/