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  1. From ASCII to Cyberspace: A Trajectory in Digital Poetry

    From ASCII to Cyberspace: A Trajectory in Digital Poetry

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 13.04.2011 - 10:45

  2. Bearing the Fruits of E-­Poetry: A Personal Decennial View

    Bearing the Fruits of E-­Poetry: A Personal Decennial View

    Scott Rettberg - 20.05.2011 - 13:35

  3. The Present of the Word: Poetry's Coming Digital Presence (on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the Poetics Program)

    The Present of the Word: Poetry's Coming Digital Presence (on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the Poetics Program)

    Scott Rettberg - 21.05.2011 - 09:42

  4. From the Page to the Screen to Augmented Reality: New Modes of Language-Driven Technology Mediated Research

    From the Page to the Screen to Augmented Reality: New Modes of Language-Driven Technology Mediated Research

    Scott Rettberg - 17.06.2011 - 12:04

  5. Programmed digital poetry: a poetry of the apparatus; media art?

    Programmed digital poetry: a poetry of the apparatus; media art?

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 30.08.2011 - 10:50

  6. Basquiat meets Mario Brothers? Digital poet Jason Nelson on the meaning of art games

    An interview with the self-described digital poet Jason Nelson on the semiotic pleasures of playing and creating "art-games," indie works produced outside corporate game studios, which, Nelson predicts, will eventually be recognized as the most significant art movement of the 21st century. While explaining how he came to be a digital author, Nelson addresses topics such as his continued love of Flash as a production tool, despite its likely obsolesence, his appreciation for gamescapes that allow for aimless wandering, and the intense reactions his art-games provoke in players. Alluding to the fact that Digital Poet is not the most lucrative of professions, Nelson signals his desire to design "big budget console games," provided he could do so on his terms. 

    (Source: Eric Dean Rasmussen)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 28.09.2011 - 12:44

  7. Voice of the poet programmer Jörg Piringer

    Voice of the poet programmer Jörg Piringer

    J. R. Carpenter - 25.11.2011 - 13:30

  8. Aesthetic Animism: Digital Poetry as Ontological Probe

    This thesis is about the poetic edge of language and technology. It inter-relates both computational creation and poetic reception by analysing typographic animation softwares and meditating (speculatively) on a future malleable language that possesses the quality of being (and is implicitly perceived as) alive. As such it is a composite document: a philosophical and practice-based exploration of how computers are transforming literature, an ontological meditation on life and language, and a contribution to software studies. Digital poetry introduces animation, dimensionality and metadata into literary discourse. This necessitates new terminology; an acronym for Textual Audio-Visual Interactivity is proposed: Tavit. Tavits (malleable digital text) are tactile and responsive in ways that emulate living entities. They can possess dimensionality, memory, flocking, kinematics, surface reflectivity, collision detection, and responsiveness to touch, etc…. Life-like tactile tavits involve information that is not only semantic or syntactic, but also audible, imagistic and interactive.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 16.03.2012 - 16:49

  9. Electronic Poetry: Understanding Poetry in the Digital Environment

    This study has as its main research object the new forms of poetry based on informatics and it is located in the fields of critical theory, hermeneutics, semiotics of the text and digital culture.

    These new forms emerging from the meeting of poetry and informatics are collectively called Digital Poetry. Digital poetry – also referred to as E-poetry, short for electronic poetry – refers to a wide range of approaches to poetry that all have in common the prominent and crucial use of computers or digital technologies and other devices. Digital poetry does not concern itself with the digitalization of printed works, it relates to digital texts. This work studies only electronic poems created to be read on the computer accessible online. It offers the close-readings of 35 e-poems in 5 different languages (English, French, Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish).

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 19.03.2012 - 08:16

  10. An Interview with Jason Nelson

    This interview appeared alongside three works by Jason Nelson in Cordite's Electronica issue, giving insight into Nelson's creative practices and digital poetry.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 04.05.2012 - 00:11

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