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  1. The Novel as Multimedia, Networked Book: An Interview with Steve Tomasula

    Steve Tomasula is the author of several novels—VAS: An Opera in Flatland [2002], The Book of Portraiture [2006], TOC: A New-Media Novel [DVD, 2009; App for iPad, 2014], IN&OZ [2012]—, short stories—Once Human: Stories [2014]—and essays. His work reflects on language, technology and embodiment at the intersection between the human, society and culture. Inventive explorations of the technologies of the book, his narrative image-texts and image-audio-texts are complex multimodal and multimedia compositions that reveal the interconnectedness of print and digital codes. Expressed through graphic devices and source code, these material interventions are functional elements in weaving a transdisciplinary web of discourses —literature, biotechnology, cybernetics, art history. Heterogeneous and dialogical, the novel-form is transformed into a multilayered media assemblage and a meditation on our post-human experience.

    Scott Rettberg - 25.07.2016 - 15:23

  2. Digital fiction, according to Alice Bell

    Digital fiction, according to Alice Bell

    James O'Sullivan - 17.01.2017 - 22:50

  3. Intersectional Ecologies: Matt Kenyon’s "Useful Fictions," an interview

    Lisa Swanstrom interviews Matt Kenyon, founding member of S.W.A.M.P. (Studies of Work Atmosphere and Mass Production, co-founded with Doug Easterly), an Associate Professor of Art in the Stamps School of Art and Design at the University of Michigan, and a 2015 TED Fellow.

    (source: http://electronicbookreview.com/thread/criticalecologies/intersectional)

    Malene Fonnes - 22.09.2017 - 09:13