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  1. Bridle Your Tongue

    Poetry, and the imagery found therein, has long been one of the foundations of literature across the globe. Our ability to decipher the imagery and symbols in poetic verse has long been a daunting and rewarding task for those individuals who enjoy reading and hearing verse. Bridle Your Tongue is an animated poem with a concentration on the power and longevity of destructive language. (Source: ELO Conference 2014)

    Thor Baukhol Madsen - 12.02.2015 - 14:08

  2. Spirende elektronisk poesi i Bergen

    Konkret poesi hadde sin blomstringstid på 60-tallet. det er en poesi som bruker bilder og lyd for å skape mening. Nå får denne poesien sin renessanse gjennom innføring av bevegelse ved bruk av ny teknologi. I fjor presenterte Bergen offentlige bibliotek kunstnere innen elektronisk litteratur.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 17.02.2015 - 15:03

  3. Starryveldt

    Starryveldt

    Alvaro Seica - 22.04.2015 - 14:49

  4. Opening the Cage: 14 Variations on 14 Words

    Opening the Cage: 14 Variations on 14 Words

    Alvaro Seica - 22.04.2015 - 14:53

  5. Apfel mit Wurm

    Apfel mit Wurm

    Alvaro Seica - 06.05.2015 - 23:27

  6. OTTARAS: 3 CONCRETE - LONG RONG SONG, NAVN NOME NAME, kakaoase

    Projected on a grid of particles that at times seem ordered, while sometimes chaotic and always in flux, Ormstad's constructed language poetry is exposed and read by the author while performing to Mashtalir's pulsating music and Vojjov's atmospheric scapes in the first two works LONG RONG SONG and NAVN NOME NAME. The first is based on Ormstad's language research project from his second book of concrete poetry from 2004. Here he creates words that may exist or not in any language, and this is related to Vojjov's creation of numbers, geometric forms and abstract shapes. The second work is made from Ormstad's collection of poetic family names used in Oslo, Norway, also here accompanied by Vojjov's world of cosmic shapes. The last track, kakaoase, is based on a printed picture by Ormstad, made of sound poetry where he's playing with the Norwegian language. Most of the words have no – or almost no – meaning, and here Mashtalir's music makes this an exceptional possibility for participating and dancing to concrete poetry!

    Hannah Ackermans - 30.11.2015 - 10:21

  7. O Experimentalismo como Invenção, Transgressão e Metamorfose: A PO.EX Revisitada Através de Po-ex.net

    O experimentalismo português iniciou-se na década de 1960, com um propósito comum de conferir ao acto poético valores artísticos, políticos e sociológicos assentes numa ruptura de vanguarda. O presente ensaio situa a intervenção experimental como invenção, transgressão e metamorfose, visto que perpassa as obras dos autores de "Poesia Experimental" e, mais tarde, de um novo conjunto de autores que exploraram a poesia visual, sonora, digital e a performance. Através do arquivo Po-ex.net, que documenta e dissemina o seu estudo, traçam-se dois itinerários, revisitando algumas das obras com carácter interventivo e transformativo, desde os anos 1960 até à actualidade.

    (Fonte: Resumo dos Autores)

    Alvaro Seica - 07.11.2016 - 17:36

  8. Optische Poesie: Von den prähistorischen Schriftzeichen bis zu den digitalen Experimenten der Gegenwart

    Klaus Peter Dencker, visual poet, Germanist and media theorist, documents the spectrum of forms of optical poetry from its pre-historic beginnings up to the present digital age. The compendium provides a typology of optical poetry, an international historical overview with many illustrations and several chronological tables together with indexes of subjects and names providing access to the comprehensive apparatus of notes. (Source: https://www.degruyter.com/view/product/176646)

    Alvaro Seica - 10.02.2017 - 12:41

  9. Looking Back while Moving Forward: The Case of Concrete Poetry and Sankofa

    This article considers the intersection between African oral tradition and electronic literature by exploring the potential of Sankofa to interact with concrete poetry in an electronic space. Sankofa is an example of the Adinkra, a set of symbols that were originally created and used by the Akan in West Africa. These symbols have literary value which this article looks at in ways similar to concrete poetry; examining Sankofa as concrete poetry in an electronic context enables a simultaneous dovetailing with as well as convergence from oral and print based modes of engaging with the text: aspects of oral tradition influence this exploration.

    Elias Adanu - 07.06.2017 - 20:12

  10. The Freedom Adventure of Portuguese Experimentalism and Kinetic Poetry

    The Freedom Adventure of Portuguese Experimentalism and Kinetic Poetry

    Ana Castello - 27.04.2018 - 14:25

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