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  1. Cybermountain Colloquium

    This focused event is designed to push both texts and tools to new levels through collaborative interaction, review/reaction, and usability testing 24/7 (if desired) in a scenic setting. Colloquium findings will be reported online.

    Colloquium participants will be limited to the first thity (30) invited participants who can confirm their attendance. We will strive for a balance of hypertext content creators, system developers, and researchers. If you know of others who should be invited, please forward this message to them and advise organizer Deena Larsen.

    Others who cannot participate in the colloquim are welcome to participate in a simultaneous face to face/MOO conference.(Source: description from website)

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 21.09.2010 - 10:58

  2. E-Poetry 2009

    From the organizer´s website: E-Poetry is both a conference and a festival on digital poetry. Authors and researchers worldwide meet and present their research and works. This permits researchers to present their latest research and artists to premier their most recent works. A selection of the papers is published after the conference following the peer review system and we will also like to publish proceedings of the conference. Artistic and academic events will take place at key Barcelona venues such as the the University of Barcelona, the Barcelona Center for Contemporary Culture and the Caixaforum, providing authors the opportunity to present their works to a public curious about new poetry and artistic trends employing technology and communication during the Setmana de la Poesia, that is also sharing a part of our artistic program.E-Poetry 2009 was organized by the research group Hermeneia in collaboration with the Electronic Poetry Center (University of Buffalo) and the Laboratoire Paragraph (Univ. Paris VIII).

    Jerome Fletcher - 21.09.2010 - 12:01

  3. Electronic Literature Organization 2010: Archive & Innovate

    The 4th International Conference and Festival of the Electronic Literature Organization, dedicated to Robert Coover.

    two overarching themes :

    Archive

    We are concerned with archive - although not primarily, in the context of this particular gathering, with preservation. (Preservation has been the focus of ELO attention in other contexts and fora.) Here and now we ask: what are the electronic literary, digital poetic works that are worth putting into any institutional archive, and why? What archives exist and how do we use them? What has been done to build the new archive and where is it?

    Scott Rettberg - 04.10.2010 - 00:24

  4. E-Poetry 2005

    From the event-website: Both a conference and festival, dedicated to showcasing the best talent in digital poetry and poetics from around the world. E-Poetry combines both a high-level academic conference and workshop, examining growing trends in this young and emergent art form, with a festival of the latest and most exciting work from both established and new practitioners

    E-Poetry 2005 was hosted by the Contemporary Poetics Research Centre (CPRC), Birkbeck College, London & the Electronic Poetry Center (EPC), Department of Media Study & Poetics Program, State University of New York, Buffalo
     

    Patricia Tomaszek - 05.03.2011 - 00:03

  5. E-Poetry 2003

    From the organization´s website: The EPC was founed in 1995 and serves as a central gateway to resources in electronic poetry and poetics at the University at Buffalo, the University of Pennsylvania's PennSound PennSound, UBU web, and on the Web at large. Our aim is simple: to make available a wide range of resources centered on digital and contemporary formally innovative poetries, new media writing, and literary programming.The EPC itself makes extensive resources available through its E-Poetry and Author libraries. These libraries provide curated lists of resources on a focused range of authors for personal use, research, and teaching. Additionally, the EPC curates lists of links to similar digital and literary projects, related book publishers, literary magazines, and other resources.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 05.03.2011 - 00:10

  6. Across Media: Contemporary Literature and Media Culture

    Across Media: Contemporary Literature and Media Culture

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 16.03.2011 - 15:10

  7. Reading by Talan Memmott (Electronic Literature Research Group, UiB)

    Talan Memmot reads from several of his works and discusses aspects of his writing and coding process.

    Scott Rettberg - 24.03.2011 - 17:14

  8. Digital Arts and Culture 2009 Conference and Exhibition

    Digital Arts and Culture 2009 is the 8th in an international series of conferences begun in 1998. DAC is recognized as an interdisciplinary event of high intellectual caliber. This iteration of DAC will dwell on the specificities of embodiment and cultural, social and physical location with respect to digital technologies and networked communications.

    (Source: DAC '09 site)

    Scott Rettberg - 26.03.2011 - 12:50

  9. Digital Arts and Culture 2005 Conference

    Digital Arts and Culture 2005 Conference

    Scott Rettberg - 26.03.2011 - 18:05

  10. Electronic Literature Organization 2007 Symposium: The Future of Electronic Literature

    The Electronic Literature Organization’s Future of Electronic Literature Symposium at MITH at the University of Maryland, College Park was an event that brought e-lit writers, scholars, and an interested public together for an open mouse/open mic, a daylong symposium, and an ELO board meeting. Highlights included Katherine Hayle’s keynote (nicely summarized at jilltxt), considering the idea of “literary” vs. “literature” and providing very intelligent close readings of a variety of works of electronic literature, readings from new works by Stephanie Strickland, Rob Kendall, Nick Montfort, Deena Larsen, and others, as well as three very good panel discussions. The process-intensive panel looked at the idea of process from several different angles ranging from process-intensive collaboration, to natural language interface processing, to story generation.

    Mark Marino - 28.03.2011 - 16:32

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