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  1. ELMCIP Electronic Literature Publishing Seminar

     In 2010-2011, the University of Jyväskylä conducted a survey and produced a report on European electronic literature publication and distribution. The final report will be published by November, 2012. This seminar was organized, in part, to provide a forum in which to discuss the findings on electronic-literature publishing in Europe.

    Day 1
    The first day of the seminar focused on the draft of the survey report. Following a presentation of the report, the seminar offers an invited commentary by Mark C. Marino (U. of Southern California). In the afternoon, there were presentations by Marko Niemi,one of the editors of the Finnish Nokturno.org portal for electronic poetry, Laura Borras Castanyer, founder and director of the Vinaròs Prize for Electronic Literature (Spain), and Nia Davies from the non-profit organization Literature Across Frontiers (UK). The day ended with a workshop on using the ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base led by Eric Dean Rasmussen (Norway). 

    Elisabeth Nesheim - 22.10.2010 - 11:53

  2. Electronic Literature Organization 2002: State of the Arts Symposium

    On April 4-6, 2002, many of the leading writers, critics, publishers and readers working in the field of electronic literature gathered in Los Angeles for the first Electronic Literature Organization Symposium. Titled "State of the Arts," the symposium featured three nights and two days of readings, demonstrations, and concentrated discussions on the state of the arts of electronic literature. Major Sponsorship of the State of the Arts Symposium was provided by the Ford Foundation. Keynote speakers for the event included novelist Robert Coover, critic Katherine Hayles, and author and publisher Jason Epstein. The event was a "Symposium" in the truest sense of the word: each panel featured experts engaging in a lively interchange of ideas. These moderated discussions allowed the panelists to share their insights and engage in dialogue about their specific topic.

    (Source: Conference website, archived by the Electronic Literature Organization).

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 10.03.2011 - 10:28

  3. ELMCIP Electronic Literature and Pedagogy Workshop

    ELMCIP Electronic Literature and Pedagogy Workshop

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 13.06.2011 - 08:55

  4. Electronic Literature Organization 2012: Electrifying Literature: Affordances and Constraints

    The 2012 Electronic Literature Organization Conference will be held June 20-23, 2012 in Morgantown, WV, the site of West Virginia University. In conjunction with the three-day conference, there will be a juried Media Arts Show open to the public at the Monongalia Arts Center in Morgantown and running from June 18-30, 2012. An accompanying online exhibit will bring works from the ELO Conference to a wider audience.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 19.08.2011 - 13:45

  5. Reading Digital Literature

    A curtain of tiny screens quoting from live Internet chat; stories generated by computer programs; narratives generated by their readers; words that disappear or reveal themselves depending on their readers’ position, text that peels off the wall and requires the 'reader' to push it back. How shall we read such moving letters? How do we catch their meaning? How might they make us feel? The conference convenes ten specialists from the USA and Germany to explore these and other questions in depth.

    The conference resulted in the collection, Literary Art in Digital Performance: Case Studies and Critical Positions, edited by Francisco J. Ricardo (Conitinuum, 2009).

    (Source: Conference website)

     

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 28.09.2011 - 14:29

  6. ELMCIP Events 2010-12: Electronic Literature as a Model of Creativity and Innovation in Practice

    SEMINARS

    Performing Electronic Literature
    2012 May 4-5, hosted by the University College Falmouth

    • This seminar will investigate the relationship between e-literature/digital text and performance. Members of the ELMCIP project, international speakers, and practitioners will discuss the function and understanding of performativity and its relationship to digital literature through a series of papers, presentations and practical engagements.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 14.03.2012 - 20:52

  7. Reading wide, writing wide in the digital age: perspectives on transliteratures

    Participants will be researchers having attained international recognition for their work in two fundamental lines of literary and cultural theory that we would like to pull together here, just as this is reflected in the presentation of the call for papers (see the attached file): 1. literary globalization phenomena and 2. cyberculture. Thus, we hope to generate a fruitful debate that might contribute to providing answers.

    Maria Goicoechea - 26.01.2015 - 13:05

  8. Other Codes

    Welcome to the official home page of Other Codes / Cóid Eile –  Digital Literatures in Context. This two-day event is the first Galway Digital Cultures Initiative conference, and will take place at the National University of Ireland, Galway, 11-12 May 2017. The conference is hosted by the Moore Institute for Research in the Humanities and Social Studies.

    Alvaro Seica - 11.05.2017 - 11:27

  9. Literatuur op het Scherm

    During the meeting at Saturday 13th of December 2014 at Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam four teams present their work they made for the project ‘Literature at the screen’. This program was supported by the cooperation between the Netherlands Literature Foundation (Nederlands Letterenfonds), Foundation for Stimulating Creative Industry (Stimulerings Fonds voor Creatieve industrie) and the research department of the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam.

    (source: Apvis.nl)

     

    Hannah Ackermans - 08.11.2017 - 11:23

  10. The Turn on Literature Prize 2019

    Literature has been the place to go for views on the new and discomforting. Readers have looked to literature to understand the movements of society and their own role in it. Is the experimental arena of electronic literature where we should now look? Can electronic literature help readers find ways to connect or disconnect with the ubiquitous digital transformation?

     

    The Jury

    Scott Rettberg, Professor of Digital Culture, University of Bergen, and author of Electronic Literature (Polity, 2018)
    Søren Pold, PhD and Associate Professor of digital aesthetics, Aarhus University
    Thomas Vang Glud, Editor of “The Literature Page” (Litteratursiden.dk)
    Rasmus Halling Nielsen, Author of electronic and printed literature
    Martin Campostrini, Curator of electronic literature and digital development, Roskilde Libraries
    Mette-Marie Zacher Sørensen, PhD in Electronic Literature, Assistant Professor, Aarhus University
    Maria Engberg, PhD and Senior Lecturer, Dept of Computer Science and Media Technology, Malmö University (SWE), co-editor of The ELMCIP Anthology

    Gesa Blume - 08.09.2019 - 19:08

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