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  1. Launching the Electronic Literature Collection Vol. 3

    This event was introduced in 18 of February at The Stedman Art Gallery at Rutgers University in Camden. This new ELC - third volume features 114 works from 26 countries in 13 languages. The latest collection, drawn from over 500 submitted and solicited works, represents a wide range of forms and styles, including poem generators, bots, interactive fiction, mobile apps, and more.

    Nikol Hejlickova - 01.09.2016 - 09:36

  2. Porpentine Charity Heartscape

    Porpentine Charity Heartscape is a writer, game designer, cyber hellscape dung beetle, and trash woman, whose games and curation contributed to the contemporary hypertext renaissance and the popularity of accessible text art software Twine.

    She's won the XYZZY and Indiecade awards, had her work displayed at EMP Museum and The Museum of the Moving Image, been profiled by the NYTimes, commissioned by Vice,
    the New Inquiry, and Rhizome, and she is a 2016 Creative Capital Emerging Fields and 2016 Sundance Institute’s New Frontier Story Lab fellow.

    (Source: http://slimedaughter.com/cv.html)

    Susanne Dahl - 08.09.2016 - 11:53

  3. University of Wisconsin-Madison

    University of Wisconsin-Madison was founded in 1848. It has $1B in research expenditures annually.

    The university has produced 33 Pulitzer Prize winners. For 168 years, this campus has been a catalyst for the extraordinary.

    As a public land-grant university and prolific research institution, students and faculty members partake in a world-class education and solve real-world problems.

    (Source: http://www.wisc.edu/about/)

    Susanne Dahl - 19.09.2016 - 20:53

  4. International Conference on Digital Media and Textuality 2016

    The use of computers as tools of literary and artistic creation has produced further paradigms within literary, language and media studies, but it has also promoted the resurfacing of a series of age-old debates. Digital media and digital technologies have extended the range of multimodal reading experiences, but they have also led us to readdress deep-rooted notions of text or medium. The dynamic network of media, art forms and genres seems to have been once again reconfigured. However, practices and debates that have preceded the emergence of the computer medium have not been discarded. In fact, they have been incorporated into experiences with the medium and have contributed to shaping digital artifacts. The “International Conference on Digital Media and Textuality” aims to examine this process. This conference seeks to move beyond the “old and new” dispute and to help us identify intersections, exchanges, challenges, dead-ends and possibilities. In order to achieve this goal, the panels of this conference are designed to cover multiple topics and fields of research, from media archaeology to teaching in a digital age.

    Daniela Côrtes Maduro - 20.09.2016 - 15:08

  5. Keith Obadike

    Keith Obadike was born in Nashville, Tennessee. His mother worked as an administrator at the Post Office and his father (who studied briefly with inventor Buckminster Fuller) was an electrical engineer from Nigeria. While growing up in Nashville, Keith studied classical piano, woodwinds and began programming BASIC on a TRS-80 computer. As a teenager he became a sought after sound designer and producer on the local hip-hop scene. He later joined the experimental, New York based Modern Hip-Hop Quartet as guitarist and producer. He was subsequently discovered by Kedar Massenburg (Motown Records president) and was signed to MCA records where he worked with R&B artists such as D'Angelo and Angie Stone and Hip-Hop as well as performed in concert with Lauryn Hill/ the Fugees and P-Funk. He later met and was influenced by electronic music composers like Paul Lansky and Olly Wilson while working at Duke University. Keith went on to study painting and digital art at North Carolina Central University and later became the first African-American to earn an MFA in Sound Design from Yale University.

    Magnus Knustad - 22.09.2016 - 15:47

  6. Rutgers-Camden Center for the Arts

    The Rutgers–Camden Center for the Arts provides performances, exhibitions, education programs, and community projects that inspire a full appreciation and enjoyment of the arts, create meaningful opportunities to participate in the arts, advance the central role of the arts in pre K-12 education, and increase awareness of the arts as essential to cultural, economic, and community vitality.

    RCCA is a public service unit of the Rutgers–Camden Campus, formed in 1997 to consolidate the established programs of the Stedman Gallery (1975) and the emerging programs of the Gordon Theater and Black Box Studio (1995). RCCA’s exhibition, performance, pre K-12 education, and community arts programs have evolved in response to external factors and the needs of our targeted constituencies. RCCA’s service region is primarily the area within a 50-mile radius of Camden, including southern and central New Jersey, southeastern Pennsylvania, and northern Delaware, which has a total population of more than five million.

    (Source: https://rcca.camden.rutgers.edu/about/)

    Alvaro Seica - 18.10.2016 - 14:37

  7. NEoN Digital Arts

    Scotland’s Only Digital Arts Festival.

    A hybrid mix of exhibitions, installations, audio & performance across the city of Dundee.

    NEoN, now in its seventh year, has organised exhibitions, workshops, talks, conferences, live performances and public discussions and established itself as a platform to showcase national and international digital art forms.

    (Source: http://www.northeastofnorth.com/)

    J. R. Carpenter - 09.11.2016 - 10:57

  8. Mark Boog

    Mark Boog was awarded the 2000 C. Buddingh’ Prize for new Dutch-language poetry for his debut collection Alsof er iets gebeurt (As if Something is Happening). He has since been publishing at high speed, certainly for a poet who boasts about his strong penchant for idleness: three novels and three new volumes of poetry, the latest of which, De encyclopedie van de grote woorden (The Encyclopaedia of Big Words) won the prestigious VSB Poetry Prize in 2006.

    (Source: Poetry International Web)

    Hannah Ackermans - 07.12.2016 - 14:38

  9. Eleonora Acerra

    Eleonora Acerra has a PhD in Literature and Education, obtained at the University of Montpellier (France). Her main reseach interest concerns children's digital literature, e-literary education and multimodality. Her doctoral project was part of the LiNum projet, which was aimed at developing educational contents for studying digital literature at the primary school. She currently is a post-doctoral researcher at the Université du Québec à Montréal.

    Hannah Ackermans - 08.12.2016 - 15:05

  10. Yan Zheng

    Yan Zheng is a PhD student from the University of Glasgow. Her research investigates the narrative strategies of story apps for children. She questions how the mechanism of storytelling works and what impact such mechanism may have on the reception and perception of the story. She is interested in different affordances of different media concerning storytelling, and also the similarities of storytelling on different platforms. Yan has an MPhil degree on children’s literature from the University of Cambridge in 2012 when she started to have great interest in stories told in picture book format. In 2014, Yan worked with a French digital publisher in developing a story app, The Great Ghost Chase. Yan also tests apps for Nosy Crow, a British independent children’s publisher. Currently she is doing her PhD research in distance in Cambridge MA in the United States. (Source: author's bio ICDMT 2016)

    Hannah Ackermans - 12.12.2016 - 14:35

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