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  1. Katharine Norman

    Katharine Norman is at times a composer, writer, teacher and sound artist – in no particular order. She has a particular interest in acoustic ecology, listening, sound and place, and her work traverses several creative disciplines, with an emphasis on sound and text.After moving between academia and publishing posts for some years she currently works in digital publishing for the Public Library of Science, an Open Access Science journal publisher. She continues her creative work as an independent artist and scholar, and as honorary Visiting Research Fellow at De Montfort University.For more information and online works (sound and text): www.novamara.com

    Katharine Norman - 16.08.2011 - 23:41

  2. ISEA International

    Founded in the Netherlands in 1990, ISEA International (formerly Inter-Society for the Electronic Arts) is an international nonprofit organization fostering interdisciplinary academic discourse and exchange among culturally diverse organizations and individuals working with art, science and technology.

    (Source: www.isea-web.org)
    The main activity of ISEA International is the annual International Symposium on Electronic Art. Selection of ISEA symposia is made by the ISEA International Foundation Board.

    In an important move for ISEA, an agreement with University of Brighton to establish an ISEA Headquarters was signed in July 2009. ISEA HQ provides an administrative, academic and creative base for ISEA and develops a fruitful partnership with a leading research University. Sue Gollifer, Principal Lecturer in the Faculty of Arts and Architecture and Course Leader of the Digital Media Arts MA has been appointed as the inaugural ISEA Director at the University of Brighton.

    History

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 22.08.2011 - 10:07

  3. Vilém Flusser

    Vilém Flusser was a Czech-born philosopher and journalist who lived and worked in Brazil and later France. Flusser wrote primarily in German, Portuguese, and French on a wide range of subjects, including migration, photography, anthropology, and communication. In the decade and a half since his death, translations of Flusser's books began appearing in English. Subsequently, Flusser has been heralded as a pioneering philosopher of media studies.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 22.08.2011 - 15:20

  4. Edward Picot

    I was born in 1958. Originally I come from Hertfordshire in the UK, but I now live in Kent, with my wife and one daughter. In 1992 I was awarded a Ph.D in English Literature, and in 1997 I published my thesis in book-form, under the title Outcasts from Eden: Ideas of Landscape in British Poetry since 1945. Since the year 2000, when I set up my first website, I've been working in the health service and self-publishing online in my spare time. I started my second website, The Hyperliterature Exchange, in 2003: it's a review and directory of hyperliterature for sale on the Web, with links to the places where it can be bought. I try to publish something new every month: it used to be a piece of criticism one month, followed by a piece of creative work the next, but I haven't been able to stick to that schedule for a while now. All the same, it still feels very important to me to balance my creative work with occasional critical essays. Many of my recent creative pieces have been either entirely or partially inspired by the games I play with my daughter Rachel. They therefore feature a lot of jokes and toys.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 24.08.2011 - 10:22

  5. Navigating the Borders—Edges and Interfaces

    Commentary on the panel "Navigating the Borders—Edges and Interfaces" at the 2002 Electronic Literature Symposium: State of the Arts, organized by the Electronic Literature Organization and hosted by the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA). Stuart Moulthrop moderated the panel, which featured Lev Manovich, Raine Koskimaa, Kate Pullinger, and Diana Slattery. 

    Patricia Tomaszek - 25.08.2011 - 15:23

  6. Finding a Third Space for Electronic Literature: Creative Community, Authorship, Publishing, and Institutional Environments

    The article addresses topics including creativity as a social ontology, reformulations of the idea of authorship in digital environments, the economics of electronic literature publishing, and the institutional challenges involved in developing academic environments for the teaching of digital writing.
    (Source: Author's abstract)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 01.09.2011 - 11:17

  7. Following Paths of Electronic Literature

    Easy manipulation, playfulness, creative and active participation in the progress of society and culture by the development of various (art) projects are essential for the ideal of contemporary culture and society. The aim of the article is to look at the phenomena that play an important role in the field of electronic literature – interaction, materiality, performativity and the dynamics of hic et nunc, playfulness, ludification and the innovative use of platforms. The article follows contemporary trends in the field of electronic literature and simultaneously tries to outline some possible directions that electronic literature could take in the near future. (Source: author's abstract)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 01.09.2011 - 11:24

  8. electropoetics

    Initiated on March 15, 1997, ebr's electropoetics "thread" is devoted to discussions and debates about digital poetics and writing in electronic environments. Most, but not all, of the articles published in ebr about electronic literature and digital literary art appear in this thread. The first editor of electropoetics was Joel Felix, who edited a special issue by that title. David Ciccoricco (2002-2005) and Lori Emerson later served as electropoetics thread editors.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 01.09.2011 - 12:47

  9. Digital Poetry: From Cybertext to Programmed Forms

    Digital Poetry: From Cybertext to Programmed Forms

    Zuzana Husarova - 01.09.2011 - 16:59

  10. Alan Liu

    Alan Liu is Chair and Professor in the English Department at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and an affiliated faculty member of UCSB’s Media Arts & Technology graduate program. Previously, he was on the faculty of Yale University’s English Department and British Studies Program. He began his research in the field of British romantic literature and art. His first book, Wordsworth: The Sense of History (Stanford Univ. Press, 1989), explored the relation between the imaginative experiences of literature and history. In a series of theoretical essays in the 1990s, he explored cultural criticism, the “new historicism,” and postmodernism in contemporary literary studies. In 1994, when he started his Voice of the Shuttle Web site for humanities research, he began to study information culture as a way to close the circuit between the literary or historical imagination and the technological imagination. In 2004, he published his The Laws of Cool: Knowledge Work and the Culture of Information (Univ. of Chicago Press). Recently published from Univ. of Chicago Press is Local Transcendence: Essays on Postmodern Historicism and the Database.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 02.09.2011 - 14:14

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