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  1. Gabriel Tremblay-Gaudette

    Gabriel Tremblay-Gaudette is a PhD student in semiotics at Université du Québec à Montréal. His research interests include : text and image semiotics, hypermedia literature, contemporary literature, video games, comic art, graphic novels and webcomics. He is the Media Coordination Assistant at the Laboratoire NT2. He is also a member of the editorial board of Salon Double, an online journal on contemporary literature, and bleuOrange.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 12.04.2011 - 09:39

  2. Anna Gibbs

    Anna Gibbs supervises postgraduate students in the School of Communication Arts and the Writing and Society Research Group at the University of Western Sydney, Australia. She is currently working on an Australian Research Council funded project with Maria Angel and Joseph Tabbi, which aims to construct an annotated Directory of Australian New Media Writers and Writing. With Maria Angel, she is working on a book about corporeality in writing for digital media. Her previous work has focused on affect theory and mimesis across the fields of textual, media and cultural studies, and, as an experimental writer, she has also published a number of cut up works, collaborated with visual artists on interactive installations, and has contributed to theorizing the practice of fictocriticism.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 12.04.2011 - 09:48

  3. Grand Text Auto

    A group blog about computer narrative, games, poetry and art. From 2003-2009 operated as a collective effort on a single blog, now pulls conent from individual and institutional blogs of the contributors. Grand Text Auto also had two collective gallery shows of electronic literature and digital art, at the Beall Center for Arts and Technolgoy at UC Irvine (2007) and the Krannert Center at the University of Illnois (2009).

    Scott Rettberg - 14.04.2011 - 00:27

  4. Shawn Greenlee

    Shawn Greenlee is a sound and electronic media artist. In recent performance and installation work, Greenlee focuses on generating digital audio from graphic patterns. Via computer programs of his own design, he advances new methods for interpreting visual image as sound (graphic synthesis). Further areas of investigation evident in his work include psychoacoustic phenomena, sonic environments, sound synthesis, telecommunications, and noise.

    Scott Rettberg - 15.04.2011 - 15:50

  5. Jeremy Hight

    Jeremy Hight is an artist/theorist/information designer/writer/photographer/musician/editor/curator (and hates the need for so many hyphens but works in a range of fields). His essay “Narrative Archaeology” was named one of the 4 primary texts in locative media and he created locative narrative in the project “34 north 118 west”

    His works in different fields have been shown in museums, galleries and festivals internationally and in locations in the landscape. He has published roughly 30 essays, articles and book chapters on locative media, new media, augmented reality, interface design, immersive educational tools, spatial internet applications, architectural theory, language theory and art.

    (Source: Author's site)

    Scott Rettberg - 18.04.2011 - 12:47

  6. Lance Olsen

    Lance Olsen was born in 1956 in River Edge, New Jersey, and received his B.A. from the University of Wisconsin (1978, honors), his M.F.A. from the Iowa Writers Workshop (1980), and his M.A. (1982) and Ph.D. (1985) from the University of Virginia. He is author of eleven novels, one hypermedial project, four critical studies, four short-story collections, a poetry chapbook, and two textbooks about fiction writing, as well as editor of two collections of essays about innovative contemporary fiction. His most recent novels include Calendar of Regrets, Head in Flames, Anxious Pleasures: After Kafka, and Nietzsche’s Kisses. His short stories, essays, poems, and reviews have appeared in hundreds of journals, magazines, and anthologies, including ConjunctionsFiction InternationalIowa ReviewVillage VoiceBOMB, and Best American Non-Required Reading. Olsen is an N.E.A. fellowship and Pushcart prize recipient, and former governor-appointed Idaho Writer-in-Residence. His novel Tonguing the Zeitgeist was a finalist for the Philip K. Dick Award.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 21.04.2011 - 10:36

  7. Reiner Strasser

    Reiner Strasser, living and working in Wiesbaden, Germany, was born 1954 in Antwerpen, Belgium. He studied art, art history and philosophy at the University of Mainz, Germany in the 1970's. His Web works, international collaborations, and Web art projects date from 1996. Strasser's Web work has appeared in several exhibitions/publications all over the world since 1997, i.e.: ArtOnLine (Brazil); frAme 5, trAce (UK); TEXT 2 (Australia); DOC(K)S "un notre web" (book and CD-ROM), Corse 2000; Net Art Guide (book and CD-ROM version), Frauenhofer Institut, Germany 2000; NOW Festival Nottingham, GB, 1999; E-POETRY festival, Buffalo/New York, 2001; medi@terra 01, Athens, 2001; II Mostra Interpoesia, São Paulo, 2001; COSIGN 2002, Augsburg, Germany; GA 2002, Milano; SeNef 2003, Korea; Computer Space Festival, Sofia 2003; several contributions to projects for the Biennale Venice, 1999, 2001, 2003; AJAC Art Exhibition, Metropolitan Art Museum, Tokyo, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005; FILE 2001, 2004, 2005, São Paulo.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 21.04.2011 - 12:24

  8. Aaron A. Reed

    Aaron A. Reed has worked as a travel writer, web monkey, offensive t-shirt designer, graphic artist, filmmaker, and murder mystery producer. His fiction has appeared in “Fantasy & Science Fiction” magazine, and the story “Shutdown/Retrovival” was selected for that publication's “Best of 2003” audio book compilation.

    More recently, Aaron has created groundbreaking works of interactive fiction. His IF “Whom the Telling Changed” competed in the 2006 Slamdance Guerrilla Gamemakers Competition in Park City, Utah, was selected for the Electronic Literature Collection Volume One, and was nominated for Best Script in the GameShadow Innovation in Games Festival. “Telling” has since been studied in new media courses in Australia and Sweden.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 28.04.2011 - 14:23

  9. Reading Digital Cultural Objects

    Editorial note to Dichtung Digital #40 introducing papers by Braxton Soderman, Davin Heckman, Eduardo Navas, John M. Vincler, Martina Pfeiler, Nele Lenze, Roberto Simanowski, and Scott Rettberg.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 06.05.2011 - 13:54

  10. Performative Reading: Attending The Last Performance [dot org]

    The Last Performance [dot org] by Judd Morrissey, Mark Jeffrey, the Goat Island Collective, and more than 100 other contributors, is a work of database literature that exists in a number of different manifestations online, in performance, and in museum installations. The work-in-progress was initiated in 2008. It was composed using a constraint-driven collaborative writing process that invites user contributions. In this essay, Scott Rettberg considers the difficulties of attempting a close reading of this type of electronic literature, and suggests some strategies for attentive reading, driven by close reading of fragments of the work and awareness of how the work functions as a computational and narrative system.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 06.05.2011 - 14:01

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