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  1. ELMCIP Seminar on Electronic Literature Communities

    The first seminar of the ELMCIP Project was held September 20-21, 2010 in Bergen at Landmark Café at the Kunsthall and the University of Bergen. The seminar focused on how different forms of community, based on local, national, language groups, shared cultural practices and interest in particular literary and artistic genres, form and are sustained, particularly electronic literature communities.The program included a day-long public seminar on September 20th at the Landmark Kunsthall, where participants examined specific cultural traditions in electronic literature, include examples from France, the Netherlands, the Scandinavian countries, the USA, the community of interactive fiction, the Poetry beyond Text project in the UK, and others. Participants also heard from organizers of electronic arts and literary communities in Bergen.That evening the recently released documentary on interactive fiction "Get Lamp" was screened, and the audience had the opportunity to discuss the film with its director, Jason Scott. The public program concluded the following evening with readings and demonstrations of electronic literature.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 21.09.2010 - 11:21

  2. ELMCIP Electronic Literature Publishing Seminar

     In 2010-2011, the University of Jyväskylä conducted a survey and produced a report on European electronic literature publication and distribution. The final report will be published by November, 2012. This seminar was organized, in part, to provide a forum in which to discuss the findings on electronic-literature publishing in Europe.

    Day 1
    The first day of the seminar focused on the draft of the survey report. Following a presentation of the report, the seminar offers an invited commentary by Mark C. Marino (U. of Southern California). In the afternoon, there were presentations by Marko Niemi,one of the editors of the Finnish Nokturno.org portal for electronic poetry, Laura Borras Castanyer, founder and director of the Vinaròs Prize for Electronic Literature (Spain), and Nia Davies from the non-profit organization Literature Across Frontiers (UK). The day ended with a workshop on using the ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base led by Eric Dean Rasmussen (Norway). 

    Elisabeth Nesheim - 22.10.2010 - 11:53

  3. E-Poetry Summer Intensive

    I-2012 presents an engaging range of topics in and out of digital media and language, film, interactive art, and performance in an innovative format typified by human communication, generous presentation times, extended segments for response by peer scholars, and open and creative thinking as a group. The idea here is for presenters to propose their own field of references — in an effort to enlighten themselves and to help others locate new resources for themselves — in open conversations exploring connections. In terms of content, though numerous other venues exist for considerations of processor determined digital arts (the unreadable, machinic cum machinic, special effects, and data-dominant informatic), I-2012 focuses on the LANGUAGE edge of innovative emergent media practice, i.e, as we speak, read, and intimate, what is happening between the cracks in processing? Such attention is given as simply ONE relevant locus in the larger conversation and it is given cognizant that practice does not fall into distinguishable camps, but exist as contours within a larger media fabric. It asks: What are words when we “mean” through them?

    Leonardo Flores - 13.06.2012 - 17:48

  4. What are Digital Humanities?

    Digital Humanities is a buzzword and as such, the very concept and related research approaches are subject to immensely opinionated discussions both in printed and digital media, inside as well as outside of academia. But what are digital humanities? A new discipline within the ‘traditional’ or one opposed to the ‘traditional’ humanities? A mere set of methods and technologies imported from computer sciences? Or a certain way of perceiving and engaging with modern humanities research?

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.06.2013 - 13:19

  5. Lanseringsseminar for rapporten Litteraturen i digitale omgivelser

    Launch event for Øyvind Prytz's report on literature in digital environments.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 18.06.2013 - 12:04

  6. Lecture by Piotr Marecki (Electronic Literature Research Group, UiB)

    13-14h, Sydneshaugen Skole 124.

    Invited lecture by Piotr Marecki on Polish digital literature.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 16.10.2013 - 13:22

  7. Spanish Language Electronic Literature Seminar

    The UiB Electronic Literature Research Group is pleased to welcome SPIRE guest researcher Maya Zalbidea (Ces Don Bosco University Madrid). Zalbidea presented the Spanish Language Electronic Literature Collection (2013-2014) she has developed in the ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base: http://elmcip.net/research-collection/spanish-language-electronic-litera.... The collection features Spanish language electronic literature from Spain and Latin America. Interactivity, collaboration and multimodality will be highlighted as elements that authors use in works that protest social injustice, demand equal rights, and increase the reader’s curiosity. Zalbidea will also present the results of a reader response study of some works from the Spanish language e-literature collection.

    Alvaro Seica - 25.08.2014 - 17:03

  8. UB Forum

    For more details see cross-referenced presentation on Wednesday, October 29th at 1:15pm.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 23.10.2014 - 11:45

  9. Trends in Literary Studies: Narrative, Cognitive and Historical Perspectives

    In what ways can we renew Literary Studies? How far can new approaches be combined with existing ones?

    Alvaro Seica - 04.02.2015 - 16:11

  10. Post-Digital: Dialogues and Debates from the Electronic Book Review Book Launch

    The Bergen Electronic Literature Research Group welcomes you to a special event, a book launch for Post-Digital: Dialogues and Debates from the Electronic Book Review that will include a panel discussion with contributors to this landmark 2 volume collection.

    For this interational celebration, we will be hearing from authors, editors, and contributors to the books including Joseph Tabbi (UiB), Scott Rettberg (UiB),  Eric Rasmussen (UiS), Lisa Swanstrom (U of Utah), Stuart Moulthrop (UW Milwaukee), Davin Heckman (Winona State U), Lai-Tze Fan (U of Waterloo), and Serge Bouchardon (UTC, Sorbonne) in a roundtable discussion of the project and their contributions to it.

    Scott Rettberg - 17.09.2020 - 15:18