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The Creativity Code: Art and Innovation in the Age of AI
The Creativity Code: Art and Innovation in the Age of AI
Lene Tøftestuen - 02.06.2021 - 16:41
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Reading Machines: Toward an Algorithmic Criticism
Reading Machines: Toward an Algorithmic Criticism
Lene Tøftestuen - 03.06.2021 - 16:31
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Speech and Language Processing: An Introduction to Natural Language Processing, Computational Linguistics, and Speech Recognition
Speech and Language Processing: An Introduction to Natural Language Processing, Computational Linguistics, and Speech Recognition
Lene Tøftestuen - 03.06.2021 - 16:35
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Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene
Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene
Lene Tøftestuen - 03.06.2021 - 16:43
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The Companion Species Manifesto: Dogs, People, and Significant Otherness
The Companion Species Manifesto: Dogs, People, and Significant Otherness
Lene Tøftestuen - 03.06.2021 - 16:47
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Digital Fiction and the Unnatural
Digital Fiction and the Unnatural: Transmedial Narrative Theory, Method, and Analysis offers the first comprehensive and systematic theoretical, methodological, and analytical examination of unnatural narratology as a medium-specific and transmedial phenomenon. It applies and adapts key concepts of narrative theory and analysis to digital-born fictions ranging from hypertext and interactive fiction to 3D-narrative video games, app fiction, and virtual reality. The book addresses the unique affordances of digital fiction by focusing on multilinearity and narrative contradiction, interactional metalepsis, impossible time and space, “extreme” digital narration, and medium-specific forms of textual “you.” In so doing, the book refines, critiques, and expands unnatural, cognitive, and transmedial narratology by placing the form of these new narratives front and center.
Astrid Ensslin - 05.06.2021 - 22:03
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Center for Environmental Structure series
Center for Environmental Structure series
University of Bergen Library - 15.06.2021 - 11:04
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The Book
What is the book in a digital age? Is it a physical object containing pages encased in covers? Is it a portable device that gives us access to entire libraries? The codex, the book as bound paper sheets, emerged around 150 CE. It was preceded by clay tablets and papyrus scrolls. Are those books? In this volume in the MIT Press Essential Knowledge series, Amaranth Borsuk considers the history of the book, the future of the book, and the idea of the book. Tracing the interrelationship of form and content in the book's development, she bridges book history, book arts, and electronic literature to expand our definition of an object we thought we knew intimately.
Daniel Johannes Flaten Rosnes - 16.06.2021 - 20:58
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The children’s machine: Rethinking school in the age of the computer
The children’s machine: Rethinking school in the age of the computer
Daniel Johannes Flaten Rosnes - 17.06.2021 - 21:51
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Disruptive fixation: School reform and the pitfalls of techno-idealism
In New York City in 2009, a new kind of public school opened its doors to its inaugural class of middle schoolers. Conceived by a team of game designers and progressive educational reformers and backed by prominent philanthropic foundations, it promised to reinvent the classroom for the digital age. Ethnographer Christo Sims documented the life of the school from its planning stages to the graduation of its first eighth-grade class. Disruptive Fixation is his account of how this “school for digital kids,” heralded as a model of tech-driven educational reform, reverted to a more conventional type of schooling with rote learning, an emphasis on discipline, and traditional hierarchies of authority. Troubling gender and racialized class divisions also emerged.
Daniel Johannes Flaten Rosnes - 17.06.2021 - 22:31