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  1. Teaching Digital Literature: Didactic and Institutional Aspects

    Digital media is increasingly finding its way into the discussions of the humanities classroom. But while we have a number of grand theoretical texts about digital literature we as yet have little in the way of resources for discussing the down-to-earth practices of research, teaching, and curriculum necessary for this work to mature. The book Reading Moving Letters, edited by Roberto Simanowski, Jörgen Schäfer and Peter Gendolla, addresses this need and provides examinations by nine scholars and teachers from different national academic backgrounds. While the first section of the book provides definitions of digital literature as a discipline of scholarly treatment in the humanities, the second section asks how and why we should teach digital literature and conduct close readings in academia and discusses institutional considerations necessary to take into account when implementing digital literature into curricula. The following text is the introduction to section two.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 14.09.2010 - 12:33

  2. Teaching Digital Literature within a “Research and Teaching Partnership” in a Transatlantic Blended Learning Environment

    This paper outlines the practices of teaching digital literature at the University of Siegen in Germany where Peter Gendolla and Joergen Schaefer taught courses on literature in computer-based media for students of both Literary and Media Studies. This paper thus provides an historical synopsis of the didactical transformations the teaching practices have undergone as well as an overview of the University’s profile and its focus on research and teaching literary studies. In 2007, the classroom moved online and held a class transatlantically in cooperation with Roberto Simanowski (Brown University/Providence, RI, USA). The online course approached an experimental Blended Learning concept. The paper introduces the methodological concept of the class “Digital Aesthetics” and discusses using Online Communication Systems in the context of the course of studies: Net Literature.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 27.01.2011 - 16:52

  3. Review of From Papyrus to Hypertext: Toward the Universal Digital Library

    In forty pithy essays, the author considers technological innovations that have transformed writing, altering the activity of reading and the processing of texts, individually and collectively. . . . The book's fragmentary organization--the adroit syntheses can be read in any order--makes it exceptionally accessible . . . for the born-digital generation. . . . Essential.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 24.03.2011 - 15:57

  4. Reading, Writing, and Teaching Creative Hypertext: A Genre-Based Pedagogy

    The present essay contributes a genre-based pedagogy, until now only hinted at by hypertext theorists and not imported into the domain of hypertext by genre theorists. While I focus on creative hypertexts—autobiographies and popular genres like soap operas and road trip stories—a genre-based pedagogy can also be used to guide students through the production of informational, academic, community or club Web sites, personal home pages, and whatever blurred or evolving genres students are inspired by and see fit to explore.

    I advance a genre-based pedagogy for teaching the reading and writing of creative hypertext to enable teachers of hypertext to start from what they know and to provide them and their students with concrete terms and models. Such a pedagogy, especially if informed by recent scholarship on genre's flexible and rhetorical nature, requires students to make various choices not only about form but about compositional concerns: tone, diction, prose style, character development, plot, setting, visual design, and hypertext navigation strategies. (Source: from actual paper)

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 01.11.2011 - 12:22

  5. Contributing to the ELMCIP Knowledge Base

    Hands-on workshop session during which the editor of the ELMCIP Knowledge Base, Eric Dean Rasmussen, will instruct participants on how to document and archive their research and teaching materials in a publicly searchable database on electronic literature.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 01.02.2012 - 17:28

  6. Ny litteraturdidaktik

    Ny litteraturdidaktik præsenterer en række nyskrevne artikler af danske litteraturforskere, som med udgangspunkt i deres egen forskning giver bud på en fornyelse af det didaktiske hvorforhvad og hvordan i litteraturarbejdet i skolen.   Ny litteraturdidaktik indeholder artikler af Poul Behrendt, Thomas Bredsdorff, Jan Fogt, Svend Erik Larsen, Anne-Marie Mai, Trine May, Gitte Mose, Lilian Munk Rösing, Svend Skriver og Bo Kampmann Walther.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 18.06.2012 - 11:19

  7. Netzliteratur in der Lehre: Fachliche Kompetenzen vermitteln und erwerben durch kooperatives Blended Learning

    My major investigation in my master’s thesis was based on a class held at the
    University of Siegen in 2007: “Digital Literature and Arts II.” In this course I
    served as academic assistant and developed a teaching model that is now
    applicable in Blended Learning Environments. While in my bachelor thesis I was
    interested in the design of online learning environments, my main focus in the
    completion of the master’s was on the student’s course performance: My
    objective was to find methods to analyze the students learning activity. Therefore,
    I analyzed the teaching and learning interaction based on theories I derived from
    studies on Computer Supported Collaborative Work (CSCW) and Computer
    Supported Collaborative Learning (CSCL).

    Patricia Tomaszek - 09.10.2012 - 15:07

  8. The Aesthetics of Generative Literature: Lessons from a Digital Writing Workshop

    This paper explores a range of issues related to the pedagogy and practice of generative writing in programmable media. We begin with a brief description of the RiTa toolkit – a set of computational tools designed to facilitate the practice of generative writing. We then describe our experiences using these tools in a series of digital writing workshops at Brown University in 2007-2008. We discuss and theoretically examine a set of core issues raised by workshop participants — distributed authorship, the aesthetics of surprise, materiality, push-back, layering, and others — and attempt to situate them within the larger discourse of generative art and writing practice.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 09.10.2012 - 21:23

  9. Sensory Modalities and Digital Media

    My presentation will discuss the use of information and social networking software in electronic writing with the aim of identifying and analyzing several important new directions in literary criticism in the digital era. 

    As I argue, one of the most significant pedagogical outcomes of media convergence within the literary arts centres upon criticism’s necessary de-emphasis of traditional genre-based modes of analysis and assessment. While digital works may resemble, perhaps even aesthetically mimic, the various analogue formats upon which they are based, both the qualitative and quantitative distinctions between texts, audio and image-based forms remain conceptual, not actual. Subsequently, the primary interpretative paradigms for all forms of digital cultural production tend to emerge via spatially accrued tensions and patterns between the work and its literal location within an information network. 

    Scott Rettberg - 08.01.2013 - 15:45

  10. Fugues: An Associative Project on Reading Poetry through the Use of Hypermedia

    Fugues, a project of the NT2 Laboratory at the Université du Québec à Montréal, is both an hypermedia adaptation of the poem Piano published 2001 by Quebec author René Lapierre and a literary critical analysis of that same poem. The Fugues Project originally came about when Bertrand Gervais asked NT2 Lab students to think about how to read and to analyze a paper-published poem through hypermedia. Instead of writing a dissertation as one usually does when reading a text in a literature classroom, participants were asked to adapt Piano through hypermedia. The goal was to think about new ways of reading printed text using electronic tools. The participants came up with an associative way of exploring this particular poem. This experimental project was designed not only to build an audience for new media literary works and writing by just presenting existing hypermedia works, but also to ask these literary scholars to think how they would go about writing a paper about a poem in a non-textbook manner. The idea behind this was to put theory into practice.

    Scott Rettberg - 09.01.2013 - 13:45

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