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  1. Introduction to Electronic Literature: A Freeware Guide

    Introduction to Electronic Literature: A Freeware Guide

    Scott Rettberg - 14.04.2011 - 12:27

  2. An American Life In Writing

    An American Life In Writing is a re-contextualization of the words used in the first fifty-two poems of Ted Kooser's column, American Life In Poetry. Each poem is alphabetized and made mobile through the use of Javascript and Cascading Style Sheets. Users are invited to click words within a list, and then to drag them using a mouse in order to (re)organize, score, visually depict, and otherwise create a new work. The code employed in the project allows users to deal in more than one graphic plane by piling language on top of itself and by offering shifts in perspective through an uncommon juxtaposition of words. Side by side, these two curations of language present both the traditional editorial model of print and a newer model based within the decentralized context of networked culture.

    Patrick Sanchez - 18.04.2012 - 00:36

  3. Mr. Beller's Neighborhood

    A collectively written online anthology of stories about or set in New York City, including those written by participatory contributors as well as classic fiction. The project was one of the first to use a map-based interface to place stories in neighborhoods and specific street locations. Stories are also tagged for themes, enabling sub-anthologies within the project.

    Scott Rettberg - 29.06.2013 - 11:30

  4. ## READ WRITE GARDEN ##

    ## READ WRITE GARDEN ## is an erasure poem by J. R. Carpenter carved out of Ruby code and code comments by Caden Lovelace. This text was created for The Ill-Tempered Rubyist, an international 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.

    J. R. Carpenter - 31.05.2014 - 11:26

  5. We Descend: Archives Pertaining to Egderus Scriptor, Volume Three

    Work on We Descend began in 1984, when five words came unbidden into my mind: “If this document is authentic…” I had no idea what the phrase signified: Who’s saying this? What document? Why wouldn’t it be authentic? How would it be authenticated? By what authority? How would that authority be established? Where did the document come from in the first place? As I pondered these questions, a clutch of fragmentary writings began to appear under my hands — via the standard tech at the time: fountain pen, notebook paper, clipboard.

    (Source: http://thenewriver.us/we-descend/)

    Lucila Mayol Pohl - 09.10.2020 - 11:18