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  1. electropoetics

    Initiated on March 15, 1997, ebr's electropoetics "thread" is devoted to discussions and debates about digital poetics and writing in electronic environments. Most, but not all, of the articles published in ebr about electronic literature and digital literary art appear in this thread. The first editor of electropoetics was Joel Felix, who edited a special issue by that title. David Ciccoricco (2002-2005) and Lori Emerson later served as electropoetics thread editors.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 01.09.2011 - 12:47

  2. Leonardo Books

    Envisioned as a catalyst for enterprise, research, and creative and scholarly experimentation, the Leonardo book series enables diverse intellectual communities to explore common grounds of expertise. The series publishes texts by artists, scientists, researchers, and scholars that present innovative discourse on the convergence of art, science, and technology. It provides a context for the discussion of contemporary practice, ideas, and frameworks in the rapidly-evolving arena where art and science connect.

    (Source: MIT Press catalog site)

    Scott Rettberg - 13.02.2012 - 16:05

  3. Platform 2

    Platform 2 is a series of articles by Scott Rettberg in the quarterly Norwegian literary magazine Vagant, consisting of eight pieces focused on electronic literature, published in 2010 and 2011.

    The articles were written in English, then translated and published in Vagant in Norwegian. Full text versions of the articles in English have been made available by the author on the ELMCIP Knowledge Base.

    Note that the English versions are not direct word-for-word translations of the version published in Norwegian. Because of space constraints in the regular two magazine spread column, the translation was often an abridged version of English originals, which are made available for the first time here on the ELMCIP Knowledge Base.

    Scott Rettberg - 25.03.2012 - 10:52

  4. Toward a Semantic Literary Web: Setting a Direction for the Electronic Literature Organization’s Directory (2007)

    Electronic Literature is not just a "thing" or a "medium" or even a body of "works" in various "genres." It is not poetry, fiction, hypertext, gaming, codework, or some new admixture of all these practices. E-Literature is, arguably, an emerging cultural form, as much a collective creation of new terms and keywords as it is the production of new literary objects. Both the "works" and their terms of description need to be tracked and referenced. Hence, a Directory of Electronic Literature needs to be, in the first place, a site where readers and (necessarily) authors are given the ability to identify, name, tag, describe, and legitimate works of literature written and circulating within electronic media. This essay grew out of practical debates among the ELO's Working Group on the Directory, established in the Spring of 2005 and active through the Winter of 2006. The essay offers a set of practical recommendations for development, links to potentially affiliated sites, and an overall vision of how literary form is created in a networked culture.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 24.08.2012 - 15:41

  5. Trope Report

    A series of technical reports published by the Trope Tank at MIT.

    Scott Rettberg - 19.02.2013 - 12:24

  6. Using Electricity

    Using Electricity is a series of computer generated books, meant to reward reading in conventional and unconventional ways. The series title takes a line from the computer generated poem “A House of Dust,” developed by Alison Knowles with James Tenney in 1967. This work, a FORTRAN computer program and a significant early generator of poetic text, combines different lines to produce descriptions of houses. The series is edited by Nick Montfort.

    Scott Rettberg - 02.10.2019 - 12:19