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  1. Digital Poetics or On the Evolution of Experimental Media Poetry

    The academic and literature critical discussion on new media poetry or about digital texts swings to and fro, in method and conception between two poles: one is the 'work immanent' approach of structure description and classification, and the other the deduction of abstract media esthetics. At a tangent to this the communication on media, culture and media art has been more or less committed to the priority of technological reasoning since the nineties at the latest. The concern with technology remains a dilemma: Technology has to be taken into account when dealing with concrete structure analyses of works of digital poetry, but some traps lie in wait. Is the knowledge accounted for here really sufficient? I would say that few of those taking part in the discussion who do not actually work in the specific area artistically are capable of programming digital texts (the same may be said of some artists). Another problem is something I have casually termed a new techno-ontology: a ‘cold fascination’ for technological being (also of texts), which flares up briefly with each innovation pressing for the market in the respective field.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 14.09.2010 - 14:16

  2. Literacy between book, page and screen – on Between Page and Screen by Amaranth Borsuk and Brad Bouse

    The aim of the speech will be to show that e-literature realizations not only could be a renovation of avant-garde or even earlier tradition, but also in many cases provoke the same kind of questions which were made by theoreticians of (e.g.) formalism or structuralism in relation to avant-garde or modern text. Looking at electronic texts we re-ask about a literacy of those works and have to renovate our conception of literary communication, re-thinking not only the category of the text (as Aarseth did), but also the character of signs and code used in this kind of communication.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 23.08.2013 - 10:26

  3. Reading Writing Interfaces: From the Digital to the Bookbound

    In Reading Writing Interfaces, Lori Emerson examines how interfaces—from today’s multitouch devices to yesterday’s desktops, from typewriters to Emily Dickinson’s self-bound fascicle volumes—mediate between writer and text as well as between writer and reader. Following the threads of experimental writing from the present into the past, she shows how writers have long tested and transgressed technological boundaries.

    Table of Contents:

    Introduction

    Chapter 1: Indistinguishable From Magic | Invisible Interfaces and Digital Literature as Demystifier

    Chapter 2: From the Philosophy of the Open to the Ideology of the User-Friendly

    Chapter 3: Typewriter Concrete Poetry and Activist Media Poetics

    Chapter 4: The Fascicle as Process and Product

    Chapter 5: Postscript | The Googlization of Literature

    Works Cited

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 09.05.2014 - 02:11