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  1. Cibertextualidades: Introdução

    Cibertextualidades: Introdução

    Rui Torres - 02.12.2011 - 15:02

  2. Writing the Virtual: Eleven Dimensions of E-Poetry

    Eleven characteristics of networked digital poetry, a category that encompasses an enormous variety of work, are discussed and illustrated with examples. Issues raised include the recalibration of the writing/reading relationship, the nature of attachment at the site of interaction, an architectonic quality of instrument-building that characterizes many pieces, differing treatments of time and “place”, the use of recombinant flux, a performative character displayed by many works, the omnipresence of both translation and looping, as well as pervasive references to ruin and hybrid states of mixed reality.

    (Source: article abstract)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 06.02.2012 - 10:45

  3. Meditationer omkring et o ('Meditations around an o')

    Den norske digter Ottar Ormstads svevedikt er i sagens natur ikke for fastholdere. "Fnugget svæver i luften" står der i Nudansk Ordbog under ordet svæve. Eksemplet er i selskab med ord som "danserinde", "smil", "uunderbygget påstand" og "vag". Hvordan læser man overhovedet digte, der svæver? Når fnugget ikke kan fanges, danserindens bevægelse aldrig fikseres, smilet ikke afkodes. Digte, der bliver ved med at svæve, kompletteres aldrig. Enhver læsning må derfor også kuldsejle. Ligesom digtene kuldsejler. Men alligevel fortsætter. Som foranderlige former, lyde og betydninger. Ud i alle retninger.

    (Source: Karen Wagner, catalog text)

    Patricia Tomaszek - 21.02.2012 - 20:54

  4. Beyond Space Invaders

    Beyond Space Invaders

    Meri Alexandra Raita - 03.03.2012 - 19:15

  5. Critical Code Studies

    Critical Code Studies

    Patricia Tomaszek - 10.07.2012 - 23:08

  6. Growing Intimate With Monsters: Shelley Jackson’s Patchwork Girl and the Gothic Nature of Hypertext

    Described by Robert Coover as “perhaps the true paradigmatic work” of the “golden age” of hypertext literature, Shelley Jackson’s Patchwork Girl (1995) provides not only a rewriting of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818), but an opportunity to consider the ways in which the gothic as a genre serves to problematize the somatic dimension of our writing technologies. In its capacity to touch the reader directly, at the level of the nerves, tissues, and fibres of the body, Patchwork Girl recalls the debates concerning the affective force of the gothic novel, and, in particular, the threat it was thought to pose for women readers. The gothic, in this sense, emerges as the deep and unsettling recognition that the technological is the formative ground of subjectivity, the very condition of our becoming. What Jackson calls “the banished body,” the monstrous materiality of subjectivity, haunts not only the eighteenth-century faith in the powers of rational powers of intellection, but our own post-human dreams of transcendence.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 06.07.2013 - 09:27

  7. INTERACTIVITY AND OPEN-ENDING (LITERARY WORKS)

    INTERACTIVITY AND OPEN-ENDING (LITERARY WORKS)

    Maria Goicoechea - 07.10.2013 - 13:54

  8. Concrete and Digital Poetics

    I argue that there is an intrinsic connection between concrete poetics as a theory of the medium (i.e., of language, of written language, and of poetical forms) and digital poetics as a theory of poetry for the digital medium. This link is clearly seen in the use of concrete poems as storyboards and scripts for electronic texts, both in composing text for graphic interface static display and for animation. This essay deals with the adoption of electronic media by concrete poets, with examples from the work of Brazilian poet Augusto de Campos (1931-), and Portuguese poets E.M. de Melo e Castro (1932-) and Tiago Gomez Rodrigues (1972-).

    (Source: Author's Abstract)

    Alvaro Seica - 05.12.2013 - 16:09

  9. Anatomizing the Language of Love: An Interview with Lee Siegel

    Anatomizing the Language of Love: An Interview with Lee Siegel

    Glenn Solvang - 25.09.2017 - 15:19

  10. Modernism Reevaluated

    Walton Muyumba reviews two books: Michael Soto’s The Modernist Nation: Generation, Renaissance and American Literature (2004) and Manuel Martinez’s Countering the Counterculture: Rereading Postwar American Dissent from Jack Kerouac to Tomás Rivera(2003).

    (Source: http://electronicbookreview.com/thread/criticalecologies/manufactured)

    Glenn Solvang - 25.09.2017 - 15:48

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