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132nd MLA Annual Convention (2017)
132nd MLA Annual Convention (2017)
Hannah Ackermans - 17.01.2017 - 15:25
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RETHink Art Digital Festival
RETHink Art Digital Festival
Bruno Ministro - 28.02.2017 - 22:12
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Ex Machina: Inscrição e Literatura
No próximo dia 31 de março de 2017, no Instituto de Estudos Brasileiros (FLUC, 5º piso), realiza-se o colóquio “Ex Machina: Inscrição e Literatura”, no qual serão apresentadas comunicações do projeto de investigação do mesmo nome, desenvolvido no âmbito do Grupo de Investigação “Mediação Digital e Materialidades da Literatura” do Centro de Literatura Portuguesa da Universidade de Coimbra. Coordenado por Paulo Silva Pereira, “Ex Machina: Inscrição e Literatura” permitirá conhecer parte da investigação em curso no Programa de Doutoramento FCT em Materialidades da Literatura. O colóquio conta ainda com a participação de dois oradores convidados: Rui Torres (Universidade Fernando Pessoa) e Jorge Martins Rosa (Universidade Nova de Lisboa).
Alvaro Seica - 31.03.2017 - 11:51
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Electronic Literature Organization 2017: Affiliations, Translations, Communities (ELO 2017)
The ELO (Electronic Literature organization) organized its 2017 Conference, Festi-val and Exhibits, from July 18-22, at University Fernando Pessoa, Porto, as well as several other venues located in the center of the historic city of Porto, Portugal.
Titled Electronic Literature: Affiliations, Communities, Translations, ELO’17 proposes a reflection about dialogues and untold histories of electronic literature, providing a space for discussion about what exchanges, negotiations, and movements we can track in the field of electronic literature.
The three threads (Affiliations, Communities, Translations) weave through the Conference, Festival and Exhibits, structuring dialogue, debate, performances, presentations, and exhibits. The threads are meant as provocations, enabling constraints, and aim at forming a diagram of electronic literature today and expanding awareness of the history and diversity of the field.
Hannah Ackermans - 09.08.2017 - 10:51
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Affiliations - Remix and Intervene: Computing Sound and Visual Poetry
In this exhibit, sound is represented as an overarching medium connecting the artworks displayed. Visitors of the “Affiliations” exhibit will find poetic works that radically explore language and sound. For the curators, sound is one of the fundamental aspects, if not the core, of experimental and digital poetics. Yet, as some writers and critics have pointed out - especially Chris Funkhouser, Hazel Smith, and John Barber - sound has not been sufficiently highlighted as a fundamental trait of electronic literature.
The “Affiliations” exhibit presents works that embrace appropriation and remix of older and contemporary pieces - be they merely formalist or politically engaged - as pervasive creative methods in experimental poetics. Furthermore, it suggests that electronic literature can be seen as a heterogeneous field of self-reflexive experimentation with the medium, language, sound, code, and space.
Hannah Ackermans - 09.08.2017 - 10:58
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Communities - Signs, Actions, Codes
This exhibit acknowledges the wide range of community practices converging and sharing reflections, tools and processes with electronic literature, as they challenge its ontological status. Implying an existing set of relationships, communities, such as those represented in this exhibit - the Artists’ Books, ASCII Art, net Art, Hacktivism/Activism, Performance Art, Copy Art, Experimental Poetry, Electronic Music, Sound Art, Gaming, and Visual Arts communities - share a common aesthetic standpoint and methods; but they are also part of the extremely multiple and large community of electronic literature. Our aim is to figure out the nature and purposes of this dialogue, apprehending, at the same time, their fundamental contributions to electronic literature itself.
Hannah Ackermans - 09.08.2017 - 11:34
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Translations - Translating, Transducing, Transcoding
Electronic literature is a translation process. It is rooted in a movement between the expressiveness of converging and diverging languages. A key word in the context of digital processes and practices, translation is an interface between thought and language, self and other, subject and tool, art and technology, humans and machines, or between different cognitive, symbolic, performative and linguistic regimes. Electronic literature may live precisely in this in-between space: the place where the pulse of translation, as a process, lies, celebrating inter-semiosis, transference and transformation.
Hannah Ackermans - 09.08.2017 - 11:42
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Computational Linguistics and Language Science
Computational Linguistics and Language Science
Raoul Karimow - 29.08.2017 - 04:32
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The Turn on Literature Prize
Is society’s digital turn reflected in the way we read and write literature? Will literature be “turned on” by digital media? How do media change culture? How does culture change and inform the digital field?
How can libraries best introduce new digital literature to the public? The objective of “Turn on Literature” is to find solutions to this questions. The partners will approach the field of digital literature through the work with literary installations, exhibitions and workshops in Romania, Denmark and Norway. The partnership will seize the opportunities that digital literature offers for audience development and will reposition the library to suit users’ needs in an increasingly digitised world. Target groups will be young adults and traditional book readers at the libraries.The key components in doing this will be:
Kirsten Kvalvågnes - 24.01.2018 - 11:50
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PIKSEL17
PIKSEL17
Nick Montfort - 20.04.2018 - 19:27