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  1. The Ill-Tempered Rubyist

    The Ill-Tempered Rubyist: a hasty mini-anthology of coded poetics and poetic codes is an international print anthology of poems involving computer languages, especially the RUBY language, hand-made and edited by Karen Randall in honor of the Millay Colony‘s ruby anniversary. The cover collage was created in PhotoShop, then transferred to polymer, and printed by letterpress. The text is printed on Reich inkjet paper using an Epson Stylus Pro 3800 printer. The volume is bound using the Japanese side-slab method. The finished book is housed in a clamshell case covered in red cloth.

    J. R. Carpenter - 31.05.2014 - 11:35

  2. #Carnivast: The Virtual Reality, Code Poetry App

    A review of Mez Breeze and Andy Campbell's #Carnivast.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 11.06.2014 - 17:46

  3. A Beam of Light: Reading the Portuguese Electronic Literature Collection

    This intervention presents an analysis of the Portuguese Electronic Literature Collection (PELC) I have been curating since August 2013 in the ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base. By aggregating and expanding existing records in the database and creating new ones, I have been developing a research collection that addresses the Portuguese creative and theoretical production since the 1960s in the broader field of electronic literature. The PELC uses resources from ELMCIP and PO.EX, the Digital Archive of Portuguese Experimental Literature, led by Rui Torres at the Fernando Pessoa University.

    Scott Rettberg - 19.06.2014 - 20:47

  4. New Novel Machines: Nanowatt and World Clock

    My Winchester’s Nightmare: A Novel Machine (1999) was developed to bring the interactor’s input and the system’s output together into a texture like that of novelistic prose. Almost fifteen years later, after an electronic literature practice mainly related to poetry, I have developed two new “novel machines.” Rather than being works of interactive fiction, one is a demoscene production (specifically, a single-loading VIC-20 demo) and the other a novel generator.

    Alvaro Seica - 19.06.2014 - 23:49

  5. Celeste Lantz

    Celeste Lantz

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 20.06.2014 - 18:02

  6. Special America (Claire Donato and Jeff T. Johnson)

    Special America (Claire Donato & Jeff T. Johnson) is an upstart, outreach, non-partisan organization located at the intersection of poetry, politics, patriotism, digital history and fate. An exercise in and an exorcism of American Exceptionalism, based on the spirit of intellectual play—semiotic, humorous, and performative—Special America incubated in the electronic literature community, spread to the New York City Poetry Industrial Complex, and onto the silver screen.

    clairedonato - 27.06.2014 - 19:45

  7. University of the Arts London

    University of the Arts London is Europe’s largest specialist arts and design university, with close to 19,000 students from more than 100 countries.

    Established in 2004, University of the Arts London is a vibrant world centre for innovation, drawing together six colleges with international reputations in art, design, fashion, communication and performing arts.

    Founded in the 19th and early 20th centuries, these colleges include Camberwell College of Arts, Central Saint Martins, Chelsea College of Arts, London College of Communication, London College of Fashion, and Wimbledon College of Arts.

    The University’s graduates go on to shape the creative industries in the UK and beyond, having benefitted from unrivalled learning, teaching and research. Every position within the University, from academics to managerial and technical staff, plays an important part in creating an excellent environment in which to work and study.

    J. R. Carpenter - 20.07.2014 - 11:17

  8. From the Digital to the Bookbound

    Dear Reader: How are you reading these words? On which device? Through which interface? Can you read the source code of this web ‘page’? Can you re-write it? Why does it matter? We have machines for that, we have apps! In Reading Writing Interfaces: From the Digital to the Bookbound Lori Emerson sets out to demystify the wondrous devices of our digital age by interrogating both the limits and the creative possibilities of a wide range of reading and writing interfaces. For Emerson, interface is an open-ended term – a threshold, a point of interaction between human and hardware, between hardware and software, between reader and writer, and between human-authored writing and the vast corpus of machine-based text relentlessly reading and writing itself behind the surface of the screen.

    J. R. Carpenter - 09.08.2014 - 16:06

  9. Heath, prelude to tracing the actor as network

    Traversing a variety of digital and print formats, this critical prelude introduces the possibilities of tracing the networked associations enacted in Heath by Tan Lin. The writing explores Actor-Network-Theory across platforms, considering Heath both as an actor-network in ANT terms and a coterminous mode of sociological accounting. Like ANT, Heath attempts a process of demystification through detailed description, tactical citation, assemblage, and the critical deployment of mediators and their relations, where every actor is understood as network. More directly, this paper traces the ways Heath translates diverse mediators from the digital event (the non-events) of Heath Ledger's death into an actor-network exploiting a material book format. Thus the task of the critic is to crunch the details of these manifold relations as they are situated in Heath — to describe the network enacted through Lin's ambient citations and novelistic formulations.

    (Source: Author's abstract)

    Scott Rettberg - 25.08.2014 - 10:14

  10. 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

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