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  1. Touching Words

    Cris Cheek, Maria Engberg, Jörg Piringer, and Christine Wilks discuss tactile media, intentionality, messy screens, and electronic literary works fading into the past. The video-essay was shot at the ELMCIP Digital Textuality with/in Performance Seminar held in Bristol UK. May 2012. Electronic Literature as a Model of Creativity and Innovation in Practice (ELMCIP) is a collaborative research project funded by the Humanities in the European Research Area (HERA) JRP for Creativity and Innovation. Length: ‎9:29

    Scott Rettberg - 03.11.2012 - 11:15

  2. Interrogating Electronic Literature

    A video-essay by Talan Memmott and David Prater

    Does electronic literature have a future? Is Google the end of the World? What is the role of digital poetics in global politics? These issues and more are discussed with J. R. Carpenter, John Cayley, Maria Mencia, Scott Rettberg, Alexandra Saemmer, Roberto Simanowski, and Jaka Železnikar.

    The video-essay was shot September 2011 at the ELMCIP Electronic Literature and New Media Art Seminar in Ljubljana Slovenia.

    Scott Rettberg - 03.11.2012 - 11:33

  3. E-Poetry 2007 Paris Cellfone Documentary Extravaganza (Grand Text Auto)

    A trip report from E-Poetry 2007, featuring short video clips of performances shot on a cell phone.

    Scott Rettberg - 30.01.2013 - 12:26

  4. ELMCIP Remediating the Social: Documentary (12 minute version)

    ELMCIP Remediating the Social: Documentary (12 minute version)

    Scott Rettberg - 12.02.2013 - 20:12

  5. The Exquisite Corpus: Issues in Electronic Literature

    A One Hour Video-Essay by Talan Memmott featuring interviews with 17 scholars and practitioners of electronic literature.

    Futures and Foci, Platforms and Politics, The Human Problem, Senses and Screens, Reading and Writing.

    Topics include:

    does electronic literature have a future?
    is google the end of of the world?
    what is in-between text and image?
    where is the author and what is a scholar?
    can there be a national e-literature?
    what is the attraction of touch technologies?
    what is the place of digital poetics in global politics?
    is it possible to conceal intent?

    Featuring: Mark Amerika, Simon Biggs, Serge Bouchardon, J. R. Carpenter, John Cayley, Cris Cheek, Maria Engberg, Jerome Fletcher, Maria Mencia, Nick Montfort, Jörg Piringer, Jill Walker Rettberg, Scott Rettberg, Alexandra Saemmer, Roberto Simanowski, Christine Wilks, Jaka Železnikar

    Talan Memmott - 17.10.2013 - 17:19

  6. A dictionary of the revolution (presentation)

    This is a talk about police. The text is read by Alex from A dictionary of the revolution, a multi-media project that attempted to document the evolving language of the 2011 Egyptian revolution.

    The project's digital publication contains 125 texts, woven from the voices of hundreds of people who were asked to define words used frequently in conversations in public from 2011-2014. Material for the dictionary was collected in Egypt from March to August 2014.

    Nearly 200 participants reacted to vocabulary cards containing 160 terms, talking about what the words meant to them, who they heard using them, and how their meanings had changed since the revolution. The text of the dictionary is woven from transcription of this speech.

    The project's digital publication is accessible in Arabic and English translation at http://qamosalthawra.com. The website also gives access to an archive of edited sound clips, images, and transcriptions.

    Andrés Pardo Rodriguez - 08.10.2020 - 13:26