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  1. Hyperrhiz 12: Mapping Culture Multimodally

    Hyperrhiz 12: Mapping Culture Multimodally

    Helen Burgess - 27.09.2017 - 21:28

  2. Hyperrhiz 13: Kits, Plans, Schematics

    Hyperrhiz 13: Kits, Plans, Schematics

    Helen Burgess - 27.09.2017 - 21:32

  3. Love Will Tear Us Apart, Again: Tupitsyn Art Review

    McKenzie Wark explores the work of Masha Tupitsyn as a pathway into the conditions of life in the 21st Century, somewhere above (or below) the framework of mediated experience, even beyond the limits of what we often call “theory.” With Tupitsyn, Wark troubles the current stasis of representation that stultifies thought in this age of unrepentantly industrialized culture, not by turning us away from the spectacle, but by smashing right through it, picking up its pieces, and discovering new things in the wreckage.

    Source: Abstract

    Ana Castello - 17.10.2017 - 15:23

  4. A World in Numbers: A Review of Michael Joyce, Going the Distance

    Joyce’s treatment of baseball in Going the Distance isn’t merely thematic, according to Punday, who believes that baseball (and its emphasis on numerical ordering) here represents the balance of the poetic and computational that defines Joyce’s electronic literature.

    Source: Author's abstract

    Ana Castello - 19.10.2017 - 11:46

  5. Interview with Jason Nelson

    In this interview Jason Nelson, an awarded author of works of electronic literature and senior lecturer at Griffith University in Queensland, Australia. He talks about his approach in the field of electronic literature and some characteristics of his works like gaming features, the reader’s interaction and the visuals. Nelson has published this interview on his webpage

    Daniele Giampà - 07.04.2018 - 17:21

  6. Interview with Erik Loyer

    Erik Loyer is an awarded author of digital works based in California (USA). In this interview, he talks about digital writing tools, the use of visuals and gaming features in his works as well as important issues like preservation of digital works and the restrictions of digital rights management (DRM).

    Daniele Giampà - 07.04.2018 - 17:35

  7. Intervista con Daniela Calisi

    In this interview, Daniela Calisi talks about her concept of electronic literature and more specifically electronic poetry. This interview was also published in “Texto Digital”, v. 11, n. 1 (2015). Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Florianópolis, Santa Catarina, Brasil. ISSNe 1807-9288

    Daniele Giampà - 07.04.2018 - 17:41

  8. The Trope Tank. The Idea of a lab in Humanities. Nick Montfort in Conversation with Piotr Marecki

    The Trope Tank. The Idea of a lab in Humanities. Nick Montfort in Conversation with Piotr Marecki

    Piotr Marecki - 26.04.2018 - 17:27

  9. Between Provocation and Experiment . Technical Reports and the Ecology of Scholarly Communication in the Humanities

    The aim of this paper is to describe a genre that is gaining import ance  incontemporary humanities, and especially in its areas devoted to digital media – the technical report. Technical reports are discussed as part of the larger trend of open notebook science. This form of communication draws from experiences worked out in the field of technology, computer science and science. In this understanding technical reports are a genre of gray literature, a form dedicated to communicating results of research projects conducted by laboratories. The case study discussed in this text is devoted to a series of technical reports from the MIT Trope Tank lab, which are interpreted in the light of a manifesto­text for this form of com­munication, Beyond the Journal and the Blog. The Technical Report for Communication in the Humanities, published by Nick Montfort. One of the aims of the article is also to contextualize technical reports against the background of other forms and methods of communication in laboratories from the field of contemporary humanities (including blogs, brochures, lab notebooks).

    (Source: Author's Abstract)

    Piotr Marecki - 27.04.2018 - 10:49

  10. Renderings (poster)

    Renderings – a project devoted to the translation of e-lit works into English. The poster is devoted to the Renderings project established at MIT at the Trope Tank lab headed by Nick Montfort. As the project's website explains: "The Renderings project focuses on translating highly computational and otherwise unusual literature into English. [The participants] not only employ established literary translation techniques, but also consider how computation and language interact." The poster defines and explains basic terms and phenomena relevant to the project, like highly computational literature, expressive processing, and platform studies, and presents the specifics of chosen genres of electronic literature. It discusses the general principles of the project (organizational structure, languages, direction of the translation, types of works included) and the anatomy of chosen e-lit works. The main part of the poster is a step by step analysis of the translation process, which involves not only the level of text, familiar to literary translation, but also the way computational processes function and are programmed.

    Piotr Marecki - 27.04.2018 - 17:03

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