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Martha Petry
Martha Petry
Jill Walker Rettberg - 27.07.2011 - 22:55
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J. Yellowlees Douglas
From Rebooting Electronic Literature: Documenting Pre-Web Born Digital Media:
Jill Walker Rettberg - 27.07.2011 - 23:12
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Marc Saporta
Marc Saporta
Jill Walker Rettberg - 27.07.2011 - 23:15
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I Have Said Nothing
This hypertext narrative includes two fatal car crashes. The plot of this story motivates its readers to navigate their way through the story of loss, death, and media. This chilling story also encourages the readers to a chaotic retrospective thinking and reflection.
With the use of hypertext links, the plot only progresses by the help from its readers through active participation and the choices they make with the point-and-click systemJill Walker Rettberg - 28.07.2011 - 14:42
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Rebecca Young
Rebecca Young is a new media artist and educator. Born in Melbourne, Australia, she received a BA from the Australian National University in 1985, and a Graduate Diploma in Film from Swinburne University in 1989. She has worked in film, television and new media since 1990, as a film editor, graphic designer, illustrator, animator, and researcher. Her work as a broadcast designer for film and television includes information design, animation for title sequences and special effects. Her work as an interaction designer has encompassed the creation of interfaces and animation for galleries, museums and theatre productions. Currently she is a lecturer at RMIT University, Melbourne, where she teaches design and theory classes in interactive media design. Her primary fields of interest are interactive narrative, interface design and visualization techniques. She is completing a Ph.D. in Interactive Media at RMIT University, and she recently received a 2008 AToM award for her doctoral project 'Remembering Bogle Chandler'.
Patricia Tomaszek - 29.07.2011 - 14:17
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Remembering Bogle Chandler
From the publication web site:The bizarre and tragic deaths of Margaret Chandler and Gib Bogle on the banks of the Lane Cove River in Sydney, 1963, remain an elusive and intriguing Australian mystery. This website explores the theme of inconsistent and impermanent memory, allowing you to shift forward and backward through time, space and point-of-view, and so compare eyewitness accounts of the deaths. The story is represented by a montage of sound, image and text, and is controlled via a map/graph interface. As you progress through it, the project becomes less about solving the crime and more about revealing the enigma of individual experience and interpretation. It is also about how a time and place, in this case Cold War Sydney, inescapably shapes the perceptions of the people who live within it, and how people who suffer an unexplainable tragedy are often blamed for it. It is the story of an improbable murder or an implausible accident; a puzzle without a solution where objective truth becomes impossible to grasp because it does not exist.
Patricia Tomaszek - 29.07.2011 - 14:30
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Kristin Veel
Postdoc at the Department of Arts and Cultural Studies, University of Copenhagen.
Patricia Tomaszek - 29.07.2011 - 14:57
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Jay Bushman
From the authors web site: I make stories. Big ones, little ones, strange ones, twitter ones. I believe any method of information transmission is a potential platform for telling a story, and I’m privileged to live in a time when there is an explosion of communication methods.
Patricia Tomaszek - 11.08.2011 - 15:54
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Boris du Boulay
Boris du Boulay
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 12.08.2011 - 09:44
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Anne-Cécile Brandenbourger
Anne-Cécile Brandenbourger
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 12.08.2011 - 09:46