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  1. DNA: A Digital Novel

    Taking the concept of identity theft to its logical conclusion, DNA is an interactive, Web-based novel set in the year 2075, in a future where genetic clones are commonplace and the unique identity of any individual is protected only by tacit consent. Detailing a year in the life of a clone who begins plotting to take on the identity of one of his "code partners," the novel includes a series of hyperlinks to real and fictional Wikipedia entries that provide a peek into the dystopic future of economic, agricultural, cultural, social, and political systems. Influenced by a range of electronic and experimental literary works published over the last fifteen years, DNA presents a non-linear narrative that allows each reader to select his or her own narrative path though the novel and to explore the text's connection to other fictional and non-fictional texts published on the Web. The networked architecture of the project enables the reader to not only construct and engage with the narrative world of the novel itself but with other narrative worlds that exist outside of the novel.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 12.06.2013 - 13:38

  2. 253

    There are 253 people on the London underground train that crashes in this hypertext fiction, and each person has their own story. Begin reading from any passenger.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 28.06.2013 - 23:32

  3. Textopia / Tekstopia

    Textopia is an open collection of place-related literature. using this wiki you can browse all kinds of literary texts related to places, and add your own favorite quotes about the street you live in, sunset on the Golden Gate or whichever place in the world you might like. Better still, you may write your own texts and share them with the rest of us.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 29.06.2013 - 08:30

  4. Metamorphoses

    Metamorphoses is a game about transformation and aspiration, set somewhere between our own reality and the world of forms. An exercise in simulationist IF, it offers multiple solutions to most puzzles and attempts to model interactions between objects of different sizes, shapes, and materials in a realistic way, including burning and the breakage of fragile objects.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 29.06.2013 - 09:46

  5. L'altra

    Alternate reality serial conducted on Facebook.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 30.06.2013 - 13:11

  6. Penelope Trunk: Advice at the Intersection of Work and Life

    A startlingly personal and very controversial career advice blog that weaves personal narratives from the author's life into general advice columns. Uses a lot of cross-linking back to older posts that describe other parts of the author's life.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 02.07.2013 - 14:34

  7. Traces

    "traces" is a locative media work delivered on mobile phone via video, audio and MP3, exploring the relationships of people, memory and place. In it, the environments we move through- the streets, buildings; the parks and bridges and alleyways of Sydney’s CBD - reveal themselves as sites rich with meaning, traced over with both personal and shared narrative.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 03.07.2013 - 11:47

  8. En anarkist er død

    This piece commemorates the Norweigan anarchist Harald Beyer-Arnesen, who died in 2005 at the age of 52. The piece begins by showing an newspaper opened to his obituary, and then displays a screen version of the newspaper obituary with certain words and phrases linked. When the reader clicks on a link, material is shown - sometimes articles explaining communism and anarchism, other times the voice of a friend talking about Beyer-Arnesen, a scrollable photo of some of his books or movie sequences from his childhood.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 03.07.2013 - 12:11

  9. (a grammar of signs has replaced a botany of symptoms)

    The title, (a grammar of signs has replaced a botany of symptoms), comes from Michel Foucault's The Birth of the Clinic, in which he charts a shift in the language surrounding the perception and description of the human body which occurred along with the advent of modern medicine. Hidden beneath layers of highly magnified and slowly animated images of plant cells are small narrative texts which, when clicked upon, reveal botanical observations of colour from the perception of a child. These textual offerings must be actively sought out - with no user interaction they will never be revealed. Upon clicking, no sooner are the texts exposed, then they are covered up again. This continuous process of regeneration illustrates paradox of the elusiveness of any grammar in the face of a relentless botany.

    J. R. Carpenter - 28.09.2013 - 14:33

  10. Notions of the Archival in Memory and Deportment

    Notions of the Archival in Memory and Deportment emerged as a response to a discourse of disembodiment prevalent in early days of the Internet. I never believed that the physical gendered body would be subsumed in an idealized information age. Even in our attempts to externalize and expand upon the processes of the brain through the computational and storage capacities of the computer, the precariousness of the biological body persists. Somewhere along the way cultural theory veered away from body politics. Notions of the Archival in Memory and Deportment examines from the inside, not just 'the' body, but also 'my' body in particular. I have focused on the storage and retention of bodily memory in order to explore the relationship and/or disconnect between body and mind that has preoccupied philosophers for generations.

    J. R. Carpenter - 28.09.2013 - 15:39

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