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  1. Mark Bernstein

    Chief Scientist at Eastgate Systems, Mark Bernstein has developed important hypertext authoring systems, written influential scholarly essays and acted for many years as a publisher of hypertext fictions and poetry.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.01.2011 - 11:50

  2. Frank Shipman

    Frank Shipman

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.01.2011 - 11:52

  3. Elli Mylonas

    Elli Mylonas is the Director of the Center for Digital Scholarship in the Brown University Library, as well as being a subject liaison to several departments. Previously, she was the Senior Digital Humanities Librarian. Her work focuses on identifying, developing and implementing a variety of digital projects with Brown faculty, and providing DH outreach in the form of workshop series and consultations. In these overlapping roles, she has to discover productive collaborations between librarians in traditional roles and the emerging digital activities. Elli serves on the Technical Council of the Text Encoding Initiative and has been involved in Digital Humanities since her participation in the Perseus Project.  She is a graduate of Harvard University and did graduate work in Classics at Brown University.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.01.2011 - 11:52

  4. Association for Computing Machinery

    ACM (Association for Computing Machinery) is an educational and scientific computing society that delivers resources that advance computing as a science and a profession. It organises numerous conferences, and papers published in the proceedings of ACM Hypertext, ACM SIGGRAPH and other conference series are relevant to electronic literature.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.01.2011 - 11:56

  5. ACM Hypertext 1998

    ACM Hypertext 1998

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.01.2011 - 11:58

  6. Patterns of Hypertext

    The apparent unruliness of contemporary hypertexts arises, in part, from our lack of a vocabulary to describe hypertext structures. From observation of a variety of actual hypertexts, we identify a variety of common structural patterns that may prove useful for description, analysis, and perhaps for design of complex hypertexts. These patterns include: Cycle Counterpoint Mirrorworld Tangle Sieve Montage Split/Join Missing Link Feint

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.01.2011 - 11:59

  7. Cathy Marshall

    Cathy Marshall

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.01.2011 - 12:04

  8. Forward Anywhere

    Originally written under the auspices of the Xerox PARC Artist in Residence Program, and published in 1996  by Eastgate Systems, Forward Anywhere is a hypertextual narrative written by new media poet Judy Malloy and then Xerox PARC hypertext researcher Cathy Marshall. Created when Malloy was an artist in residence at PARC, beginning in 1993, the collaborative narrative -- an exchange of the details of the lives of two women who work with hypertext -- unfolded via email over a year or so and then was somewhat fictionalizd and recontextualized into Forward Anywhere.  "...each emerges from a particular history and sensibility, Malloy's from the postwar suburbs of Boston, Marshall's from California and the sixties. To pass from one of these moments to the other is to recognize the almost-repetition of emergent or autopoetic pattern, an experience that touches something very deep in the instinctual repertoire, perhaps demonstrating that software does speak to human identity after all," Stuart Moulthrop wrote in "Where to?", Convergence 3:3, Fall, 1997: 132-38.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.01.2011 - 12:04

  9. Edward Falco

    Edward Falco

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.01.2011 - 12:05

  10. Sea Island

    This hypertext containing ten poems explore memory, desire, solitude, and loss. This is a work that uses poetry to pan a passion out of words as we progress through Falco’s “crazy sea of language” which allows the reader to follow the words and phrases many paths. This work enables the reader to create their own route through the words and allows poetry to explore new ways.

    “What this is about, for me at least, is a desire to do something different with language, to make it jump with the power of magic” (Falco, Edward)

    Eastgate Quarterly Review of Hypertext 2(1)

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.01.2011 - 12:07

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