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  1. "These Waves …:" Writing New Bodies for Applied E-literature Studies

    N. Katherine Hayles introduced the Electronic Literature concept of second generation hypermedia, characterized by their distinctive, multimodal, en enable by newly evolving, browser-based editing and network technologies vis-a-vis stand-alone, first generation, pre-web hypertext works, which were largely monomodal-verbal and followed a somewhat booking aesthetic.
    All the electronic literature generations are overlapping, the co-exist, respond to and feed off one another - similar to, and perhaps as contested as, the so-called waves of feminism.

    Given the sheer explosion of technological developments,  is important that all reach beyond their own disciplinary boundaries and into non-academic communities. 

    It is focused on the particular case of young woman’s body image, or, more precisely and inclusively, on body image in young, women-identified and gender non-conforming individuals, sawing how girls at six already express body dissatisfaction, provoking high risk for developing eating and body related distresses (Watson, Veale and Saewyc).  

    María Fernández García - 28.09.2022 - 19:34

  2. Research Methods for Auto/biography Studies

    Research Methods for Auto/biography Studies

    Andrea Brandmüller - 28.01.2023 - 15:21

  3. Reading Digital Lives Generously

    The scale, scope, privacy, ephemerality, and “amateurism” of prevailing modes of digital self-representation pose challenges for scholars seeking to understand these phenomena. In this chapter, we draw on our experiences as researchers and editors to outline methodological approaches that can address these challenges. We advocate for a “generous” critical engagement with digital life narratives that welcomes methods and concepts from other disciplines while reaffirming the ongoing commitment of auto/biography studies to an inclusive view of what counts as a “life” and what signs of life—however transient, fragmentary, and enigmatic—we are willing to learn how to read.

    (Source: Reading Digital Lives Generously | 18 | Research Methodologies for Aut (taylorfrancis.com) accessed Jan 28, 2023)

    Andrea Brandmüller - 28.01.2023 - 15:21

  4. Digital Narrative Spaces: An Interdisciplinary Examination

    Digital Narrative Spaces: An Interdisciplinary Examination

    Astrid Ensslin - 28.01.2023 - 15:27

  5. Transmedial Unnatural Spatiality and Postdigital Dystopicalization in The Pickle Index

    Transmedial Unnatural Spatiality and Postdigital Dystopicalization in The Pickle Index

    Astrid Ensslin - 28.01.2023 - 15:27

  6. Letter From Porto ELO Conference July, 2017

    Documentation of some papers from the July, 2017 ELO Conference in Porto, Portugal

    Johannah Rodgers - 15.02.2023 - 00:17

  7. Digital Realism

    Digital Realism

    David Wright - 22.02.2023 - 12:12

  8. Digital Literary Creative Practice and COVID-19

    Digital Literary Creative Practice and COVID-19

    David Wright - 22.02.2023 - 12:15

  9. Data as language; language as data

    Data as language; language as data

    David Wright - 22.02.2023 - 12:16

  10. Digital Orihon (デジタル 折り本): The (un)continuous shape of the novel

    Digital Orihon (デジタル 折り本): The (un)continuous shape of the novel

    David Wright - 22.02.2023 - 12:18

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