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On Writing After the Death of Print
On Writing After the Death of Print
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 06.02.2012 - 18:59
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What’s New Is Old: technology, poetry, orality
What’s New Is Old: technology, poetry, orality
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 06.02.2012 - 19:02
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Lit
Lit
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 06.02.2012 - 19:04
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Could I Hear That on YouCode?
Could I Hear That on YouCode?
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 06.02.2012 - 19:05
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Review of Digital Art and Meaning: Reading Kinetic Poetry, Text Machines, Mapping Art, and Interactive Installations, by Chris Funkhouser
Review of Digital Art and Meaning: Reading Kinetic Poetry, Text Machines, Mapping Art, and Interactive Installations, by Chris Funkhouser
Patricia Tomaszek - 13.02.2012 - 00:53
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Chasing Ghosts: Experiencing the Visual Tactility of Michael Joyce’s Electronic Hyperfictions, afternoon, a story (1987) and Twelve Blue (1996)
Chasing Ghosts: Experiencing the Visual Tactility of Michael Joyce’s Electronic Hyperfictions, afternoon, a story (1987) and Twelve Blue (1996)
Arnaud Regnauld - 05.03.2012 - 14:35
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Between the Visceral and the Virtual: Navigating the Embedded Surfaces of Shelley Jackson’s Patchwork Girl
Between the Visceral and the Virtual: Navigating the Embedded Surfaces of Shelley Jackson’s Patchwork Girl
Arnaud Regnauld - 05.03.2012 - 14:46
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Bones of the Book
A short essay about the digital future of books that focuses primarily on various e-book formats, constrating the failures of early experiments by publishers such as Voyager Expanded Books with more recent digital-publishing trends -- such as Touch Press's app version of T.S. Eliot's The Wasteland and meta-analytic tools, such as Amazon's X-Ray, which is bundled with the Kindle Touch -- that suggest the promose of expanded e-books. Electronic literature, in this narrative, receives only cursory attention. After noting that the "electronic literary vanguard tends to dislike e-books because they are too much like real books," Moor provides a brief account of electronic literature that, regretably, equates the field almost exclusively with the hypertextualists who built and wrote using StorySpace. While Moor is aware that a multiplicity of e-literary forms exist, he neglects to describe the "dreamy new places" that author-programmers have subsequently built.
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 07.03.2012 - 14:33
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Interview with Chris Funkhouser
Video-Interview by e-lit author and scholar David Jhave Johnston in Chris Funkhouser's rural paradise studio on Feb. 9th 2012.
Patricia Tomaszek - 15.03.2012 - 20:26
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Interview with Ian Hatcher
Ian Hatcher responds to e-lit author and scholar David Jhave Johnston.
Patricia Tomaszek - 15.03.2012 - 20:34