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  1. Git as Platform for Electronic Literature Authorware

    This paper outlines public archives of electronic literature authoring tools and technologies via git version control as a platform for decentralized organization, with a specific focus on current and proposed future uses of the GitHub platforms. How are the source code and tooling for creating electronic literature maintained currently preserved through public open source, and how might ELO initiatives and community best practices engage with them in the future?

    Daniel Johannes Flaten Rosnes - 02.06.2021 - 16:25

  2. Humbug : The Art of P.T. Barnum

    Humbug : The Art of P.T. Barnum

    Lene Tøftestuen - 02.06.2021 - 16:25

  3. Bookishness: Loving Books in a Digital Age

    Twenty-first-century culture is obsessed with books. In a time when many voices have joined to predict the death of print, books continue to resurface in new and unexpected ways. From the proliferation of “shelfies” to Jane Austen–themed leggings and from decorative pillows printed with beloved book covers to bookwork sculptures exhibited in prestigious collections, books are everywhere and are not just for reading. Writers have caught up with this trend: many contemporary novels depict books as central characters or fetishize paper and print thematically and formally.

    Lene Tøftestuen - 02.06.2021 - 16:34

  4. Epidemiology and Spatial Narrative : Scaffolds under the Pandemic - Confinement Spaces and Existential E-Narrative

    were forced into situations somewhere between Brazil and The Matrix, in which workspaces become the world. Also this evinced Paul Virilio’s notion of technological acceleration while confining to one spot (ZOOM!) undifferentiates the technologically enabled person without disabilities and the technologically au and the technologically augmented paraplegic (The Third interval).
    These existential effects led to my creation of a visualyl narratological immersive experience entitled Confinement Spaces, which consisted of 3D scans and renders of the UAE quotidian landscape, first of places immediately around me. But as I was able to expand my tr avels, more spaces were scanned in, creating a form of “narrative molecule” based on experience in the 1990’s with designer Roy Stringer’s Navihedron interface regime.
    In Confinement Spaces, six months of expanding explorations into iconic spaces of the United Arab Emirates as an allegory of confinement in space and the fracturing of reality as depicted by the glitches in the 3D scans.

    Daniel Johannes Flaten Rosnes - 02.06.2021 - 16:35

  5. The Creativity Code: Art and Innovation in the Age of AI

    The Creativity Code: Art and Innovation in the Age of AI

    Lene Tøftestuen - 02.06.2021 - 16:41

  6. Reading Machines: Toward an Algorithmic Criticism

    Reading Machines: Toward an Algorithmic Criticism

    Lene Tøftestuen - 03.06.2021 - 16:31

  7. Speech and Language Processing: An Introduction to Natural Language Processing, Computational Linguistics, and Speech Recognition

    Speech and Language Processing: An Introduction to Natural Language Processing, Computational Linguistics, and Speech Recognition

    Lene Tøftestuen - 03.06.2021 - 16:35

  8. Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene

    Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene

    Lene Tøftestuen - 03.06.2021 - 16:43

  9. The Companion Species Manifesto: Dogs, People, and Significant Otherness

    The Companion Species Manifesto: Dogs, People, and Significant Otherness

    Lene Tøftestuen - 03.06.2021 - 16:47

  10. Emulating hypertext: a feminist, postphenomenological perspective

    This paper presents a feminist, platform-conscious approach to reading and preserving a work of early, pre-web electronic literature: Kathryn Cramer's short Storyspace hypertext fiction, "In Small & Large Pieces" (1994). Ensslin adopts a postphenomenological approach centered around Material Engagement Theory (MET), which was originally developed by cognitive archeologists and anthropologists to reflect the material significance of extended, embedded, embodied and enactive cognition, also known as "e-cognition" (Ransom and Gallagher 2020), for human development and subjectivity.

    Astrid Ensslin - 05.06.2021 - 21:50

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