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  1. In Search for the Novel Possibilities of Text-Based Installations: Teaching Digital Literature within New Media Studies in Slovenia

    In Search for the Novel Possibilities of Text-Based Installations: Teaching Digital Literature within New Media Studies in Slovenia

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 07.04.2011 - 12:32

  2. Teaching Digital Literature through Multi-Layered Analysis

    Teaching Digital Literature through Multi-Layered Analysis

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 07.04.2011 - 12:34

  3. Literatura Electrónica

    Weblog focused on electronic literature, digital art, and digital culture, featuring frequent reviews of works of electronic literature.

    Scott Rettberg - 14.04.2011 - 00:51

  4. Netpoetic

    Netpoetic is a collaborative weblog exploring digital poetry and electronic literature, including contributions from about 25 authors and critics active in the field, ranging from calls for works and announcements to reviews to pedagogical and theoretical observations. This collective activity is organized by digital poet Jason Nelson.

    Scott Rettberg - 14.04.2011 - 12:09

  5. Electronic Literature and the Mashup of Analog and Digital Code

    This essay examines the complexity of contemporary electronic literary practice. It evaluates how electronic literature borrows from, and also influences, the reception of the textual message in other forms of communication that efficiently combine image, sound and text as binary data, as information that is compiled in any format of choice with the use of the computer. The text aims to assess what it means to write in literary fashion in a time when crossing over from one creative field to another is ubiquitous and transparent in cultural production. To accomplish this, I relate electronic literature to the concept of intertextuality as defined by Fredric Jameson in postmodernism, and assess the complexity of writing not only with words, but also with other forms of communication, particularly video. I also discuss Roland Barthes’s principles of digital and analogical code to recontextualize intertextuality in electronic writing as a practice part of new media. Moreover, I discuss a few examples of electronic literature in relation to mass media logo production, and relate them to the concept of remix.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 06.05.2011 - 15:17

  6. Dichtung Digital 40

    This edition reflects upon the need of techniques to approach the ongoing upheavals taking place in today's technology-driven production of (literary) art. The contributions assembled here all discuss ways of reading cultural objects created with digital media. The objects of interest are: a computer game (Soderman), a performance of a work that houses and visualizes its literary artifacts on a website - a huge database of texts by different authors (Rettberg), default settings and electronic poetics in an age of technological determinism (Heckman), literary artifacts in between book and programmable media (Vincler), story-telling in the Gulf (Lenze), and signs in a culture of mashups (Navas). In a time when cultural objects in digital culture reconfigure the reception of their addressees, it is important to develop not only a proper understanding of the impact of these ruptures on literary communication but also an interpretation of the presented moves into the scope of scholarly discussion. Such an engagement calls for what Roberto Simanowski proposes in his contribution: "digital hermeneutics."

    Patricia Tomaszek - 06.05.2011 - 18:42

  7. Generative Poetry

    This set of works provides three different and powerful combinations of text, sound, image, and exploded letters, all of which function to cut up and recombine language using code developed for Concatenation. In Concatenation, the machine of the text assembles poems that deal with the ability of language to enact violence; in When You Reach Kyoto, the text and images engage the city and computation; and in Semtexts, combinations work at the level of syllable and letter.(Source: Electronic Literature Collection, Vol. 1).

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 09.05.2011 - 13:47

  8. PO.EX '70-­80: The Electronic Multimodal Repository

    Portuguese experimental poetry of the 1970s and 1980s includes visual poetry, sound poetry, videopoetry, performance poetry, and computer poetry. Experimental literary objects, practices, and events often consist of an interaction between notational forms on paper and site-specific live performances. Thus the eventuality of literary meaning is dramatically foregrounded by turning the text into a script for an act whose performance co-constitutes the work. The aim of ‘PO.EX ‘70-’80: A Digital Archive of Portuguese Experimental Literature’ (http://po-ex.net/) is to represent this intermedia and performative textuality in an electronic database. The aggregation and marking up of this large multimodal corpus has material and interpretative implications which challenge our representations of experimental works and practices. Whether taking the form of facsimiles of books and paper collages, photographs of installations, videos of performances or emulations of early digital poems, digital remediation re-performs the works for the current techno-social context.

    Scott Rettberg - 20.05.2011 - 13:28

  9. In Search of Sustainability: Institutional and Curricular Limitations of Teaching Electronic Literature

    In Search of Sustainability: Institutional and Curricular Limitations of Teaching Electronic Literature

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 13.06.2011 - 10:05

  10. …ha perdut la veu: Some reflections on the composition of e-literature as a minor literature

    This article has two objectives. One is to give a clear example of the way in which practice and theory, or rather practice-as-research, can exist in a symbiotic relationship – each benefiting and illuminating the other. The second aim is to propose and map out an area of potential further research into the discursive positioning of e-literature. It draws on some of the thinking of Deleuze and Guattari around language and literature, in particular as it is articulated through a reading of them by Jean-Jacques Lecercle. In this respect it should be seen as a point of departure, not a presentation of findings. The article is an extended version of one I gave at Kingston University as part of the From Page to Screen to Augmented Reality Conference. The original article was designed to be delivered in conjunction with a video of a digital text work in performance. For this context I have taken some screenshots of that video and added them to the article. They will at least provide some sense of how the digital text work is displayed and how it functions.

    Source: author's abstract

    Jerome Fletcher - 17.06.2011 - 12:09

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