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  1. The Dreamlife of Letters

    A Flash animation, based on a text by Rachel Blau DuPlessis, that attempts to explore the ground between classic concrete poetry, avant-garde feminist practice, and "ambient" poetics (that's really just plain fun to watch).

    (Source: Author's Description from ELC Vol. 1)

    Patricia Tomaszek - 16.09.2010 - 16:54

  2. Flickering Connectivities in Shelley Jackson's Patchwork Girl: The Importance of Media-Specific Analysis

    Flickering Connectivities in Shelley Jackson's Patchwork Girl: The Importance of Media-Specific Analysis

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 14.03.2011 - 20:44

  3. False Pretenses, Parasites, and Monsters

    A meditation on parasites and montrosity in American novels and hypertext fictions.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 15.03.2011 - 15:57

  4. A Cyborg Manifesto

    A Cyborg Manifesto

    Scott Rettberg - 25.03.2011 - 11:21

  5. Subject to Change: The Monstrosity of Media in Shelley Jackson's Patchwork Girl; or, A Modern Monster and Other Post-humanist Critiques of the Instrumental

    Subject to Change: The Monstrosity of Media in Shelley Jackson's Patchwork Girl; or, A Modern Monster and Other Post-humanist Critiques of the Instrumental

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 08.07.2011 - 10:53

  6. Zeros and Ones: Digital Women and the New Cyberculture

    Zeros and Ones: Digital Women and the New Cyberculture

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 08.07.2011 - 11:32

  7. Comparative Analysis of the Cyberfeminist Hyperfiction and New Media Art work: Francesca da Rimini’s Dollspace

    Comparative Analysis of the Cyberfeminist Hyperfiction and New Media Art work: Francesca da Rimini’s Dollspace

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 30.08.2011 - 12:36

  8. Towards a Multimodal Analysis of da Rimini's Dollspace

    From the publication:

    In her article "Towards a Multimodal Analysis of da Rimini's Dollspace" Maya Zalbidea
    Paniagua analyzes Francesca da Rimini's Dollspace <http://dollyoko.thing.net/> (1997-2001). By analyzing Dollspace Zalbidea Paniagua reinforces the proposition that studies on material aesthetics and intermediality encompass a process of rethinking the notion of boundaries across material structures. This is clearly shown in da Rimini's Dollspace, where ambivalence cuts across discursive genres and distinct material formats of image, text, and audio. Hypertext engages the user/participant in a dialogue with the machine and, in the case of Dollspace, across people's sexual attitudes. Dollspace seeks to do more than to just shock the user: it wants to haunt its user to become an intersubjectively embodied act.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 21.09.2011 - 13:15

  9. Writing as a Woman: Annie Abrahams' e-writing

    Is there such a thing as womens' writing? Or, for that matter, womens' media? Elisabeth Joyce moves through the work of Annie Abrahams and writes against restrictive domestications of electronic media.

    (Source: journal abstract)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 08.11.2011 - 10:28

  10. Mythologies of Landforms and Little Girls

    When I began writing Mythologies in 1995 I was thinking about gender in language and, informed by a poststructuralist feminist critique of the representation of the female body as landscape, I set out to explode these stereotypes by using over-the-top geological metaphors. I wanted to convey a moment of realization, when a number of ideas come together at once. It mattered little to me what order the ideas came in, only that they came together in the end. The narrative structure of this non-linear HTML version was influenced by the Choose Your Own Adventure books. The interface was based on the placemats you get at many restaurants in Nova Scotia, which depict a map of Nova Scotia surrounded by icons of purported interest to tourists: lobsters, whales, lighthouses, beaches and the Bluenose. The found images and texts came from a geology course I took in university, a civil engineering manual from the 1920s and a random assortment of textbooks found in used bookstores. The deadpan technical descriptions of dikes, groins and mattress work add perverse sexual overtones to the otherwise quite chaste first-person narrative.

    J. R. Carpenter - 28.01.2012 - 23:17

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