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  1. Electronic Literature Without a Map

    The paper discusses several problems that seem to define and determine the field of electronic literature in theory and practice and suggests several strategies to remedy the situation in the spirit that is both analytical and polemical.

    Electronic literature has been around at least for 50 years and many of its typical ergodic ingredients share a cultural (pre)history that reaches back to classical antiquity and beyond (I Ching). Still, the cultural, economical, educational and even literary status and visibility of electronic literature is low and obscure at best despite occasional canonisations of hypertext fiction and poetry (the works of Michael Joyce and Jim Rosenberg), literary groups such as the OuLiPo that from very early on extended their orientation beyond print literature, and the efforts of an international or semi-international organisation (ELO) to promote and preserve electronic literature - not to mention multiple and more or less influential and comprehensive theories of electronic and ergodic literature.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 27.01.2011 - 16:03

  2. Multimedia Criticism

    Commentary on the Multimedia Criticism panel discussion at the Electronic Literature Symposium: State of the Arts (2002). Robert Kendall moderated the panel. Rita Raley, Joseph Tabbi, Thomas Swiss, and Jane Yellowlees Douglas were the panelists.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 22.02.2011 - 15:52

  3. Intermediation: The Pursuit of a Vision

    Twenty-first century literature is computational, from electronic works to print books created as digital files and printed by digital presses. To create an appropriate theoretical framework, the concept of intermediation is proposed, in which recursive feedback loops join human and digital cognizers to create emergent complexity. To illustrate, Michael Joyce's afternoon is compared and contrasted with his later Web work, Twelve Blue. Whereas afternoon has an aesthetic and interface that recall print practices, Twelve Blue takes its inspiration from the fluid exchanges of the Web. Twelve Blue instantiates intermediation by creating coherence not through linear sequences but by recursively cycling between associated images. Intermediation is further explored through Maria Mencia's digital art work and Judd Morrissey's The Jew's Daughter and its successor piece, The Error Engine, by Morrissey, Lori Talley, and Lutz Hamel.

    (Source: Project MUSE abstract)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 11.03.2011 - 10:27

  4. From Lexias to Remediation: Theories of Hypertext Authorship in the 1990s

    How electronic-writing technologies will affect authorship remains an
    important issue in hypertext theory. Theorists agree that the author’s function
    has changed and will continue to change as writing migrates from the page to
    the screen, but they disagree on the specifics of how print-based and
    hypertext-based authorship differ and whether this digital migration constitutes a radical break from the age of print. Early hypertext
    advocates, writing in the early 1990s, claimed that naviagational features, such
    as hypertextual links, transfer a large degree of textual control from writers
    to readers, thus blurring the distinction between the role of the author and
    that of the reader. More recently, theorists began to dispute the idea that the
    hypertextual reading experience was necessarily more creatively empowering than
    reading a printed book. Exploring the arguments of influential hypertext
    theorists, this paper traces developments in hypertext theory in the United
    States during the 1990s. It describes how poststructuralism has informed

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 11.03.2011 - 12:51

  5. Preface [to Regards Croisés: Perspectives on Digital Literature]

    Preface [to Regards Croisés: Perspectives on Digital Literature]

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 24.03.2011 - 12:09

  6. Cybertext Yearbook 2006: Ergodic Histories

    Cybertext Yearbook 2006: Ergodic Histories

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 07.04.2011 - 10:59

  7. Adventures in Mot-Town

    In his State of the Arts keynote, Coover offered a tour of a number of contemporary works of electronic literature, in the style of an adventure story following our hero "Mot" -- the word -- as it wrestles through the multimediated world of graphic networked technologies.

    Scott Rettberg - 30.05.2011 - 16:17

  8. Anthological and Archaeological Approaches to Digital Media: A Review of Electronic Literature and Prehistoric Digital Poetry

    A review of two field-defining books about electronic literature by N. Katherine Hayles and Christopher Funkhouser, whose literary scholarship counters the ahistoricizing tendencies of much writing about digital media.

    (Source: Eric Dean Rasmussen)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 12.09.2011 - 11:19

  9. It Is the End of the World as We Know It and I Feel Fine

    My paper tries to make three simple points, each one of which is connected to a specific end of electronic literature: theoretical, practical, and historical. The point of departure is of course electronic literature as we know it and perhaps like it to be: seriously undertheorized, critically experimental, ignored by media and literary departments, and practiced in relatively small and isolated communities that are firmly situated outside the usual constraints of literary market economy. This is about to change given the multitude of devices and gadgets suitable for consuming electronic literature controlled (i.e. produced, published, distributed and owned) by big media corporations. In short, we’ll soon have something new and unprecedented: popular electronic literature and probably all that usually (or historically) comes with it: both healthy and counterproductive tensions between e-literatures high and low, experimental and generic, innovative and mainstream etc. Therefore, we might need several alternative ends.

    Hannah Ackermans - 28.11.2015 - 14:39

  10. Review of Stewart O'Nan's West of Sunset

    In this review of O’Nan’s West of Sunset, Messenger explores 20th Century American literary history as a kind of contemporary metafictional myth. Using Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald as characters composing the life of a literary icon against the emergence of “Hollywood,” O’Nan’s work is considered a bittersweet meditation on the death of an author and the hope that his work lives on.

    Source: Author’s Abstract

    Ana Castello - 16.10.2017 - 16:08

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