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  1. Alexandra Glavanakova-Yaneva

    I teach American literature and cultural studies at Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski.” My research interests are: postmodern American literature; the major cultural shifts in literacy, education, literary studies, the creation and reception of texts under the impact of digital technology. I have a number of publications concerning the evolution of cybertexts and the re/positioning of the body in cyberspace. (source: http://www.jatsbulgaria.org/show.php?id=8&type=author)

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 22.05.2011 - 13:40

  2. JODI

     

    JODI pioneered Web art in the mid-1990s. Based in The Netherlands, JODI were among the first artists to investigate and subvert conventions of the Internet, computer programs, and video and computer games. Radically disrupting the very language of these systems, including interfaces, commands, errors and code, JODI stages extreme digital interventions that destabilize the relationship between computer technology and its users.

    Scott Rettberg - 23.05.2011 - 14:31

  3. Digital Arts and Culture 2000 Conference

    The third conference in the Digital Arts and Culture series was held at the University of Bergen. The conference chair was Jan Rune Holmevik. In addition to the electronic literature-related events, there were a number of digital arts performances not listed here as well as presentations on digital culture in a broader sense. Please see the conference website for a full list. Abstracts are not available for most presentations.

    Scott Rettberg - 30.05.2011 - 14:03

  4. Carolyn Guertin

    Carolyn Guertin holds a dual appointment in digital media—as Assistant Professor at the University of Texas at Arlington and as a member of the graduate faculty at Transart Institute in Berlin, Germany. She was Senior McLuhan Fellow and SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow at the McLuhan Program in Culture and Technology at the University of Toronto from 2004 to 2006. She is widely published on issues related to cyberfeminism, born-digital arts, and participatory cultures. 

    (Source: authors page, Continuum website)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 13.06.2011 - 09:18

  5. International Workshop on Databases and Bibliographic Standards for Electronic Literature

    This Consortium for Electronic Literature (CELL) workshop presents international projects that document, curate, and present research on electronic literature: born-digital literary forms such as hypertext fiction, kinetic poetry, interactive drama, location-based narrative, multimedia literary installations, and other types of poetic experiences made for the networked computer.

    Since June of 2010, as part of the HERA-funded ELMCIP Project, the University of Bergen's Electronic Literature Research Group has been developing the ELMCIP Knowledge Base (http://elmcip.net/knowledgebase), a platform positioned to become one of the leading research tools in this area of the digital humanities.

    The primary goal of the workshop is to bring together members of several international projects working on the documentation of electronic literature. Representives of projects from the United States, Canada, Portugal, Germany, Spain, Australia, and Norway will gather to pubicly present work on their projects, and to discuss how to best establish an international research infrastructure for the field.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 13.06.2011 - 09:48

  6. Michel Chaouli

    Michel Chaouli

    Jörgen Schäfer - 28.06.2011 - 16:54

  7. Anne-Lyse Renon

    After studying History of Arts and Anthropology, I studied Linguistics and graduated in Graphic Design in the Valence Academy of Arts and design. Actually I am a PhD candidate in Anthropology in the EHESS (France) and my research focuses on Design and Aestetics in Science practices.

    Anne-Lyse Renon - 04.07.2011 - 17:35

  8. Boston Cyberarts Festival

    The Boston Cyberarts Festival is the first and largest collaboration of artists working in new technologies in all media in North America, encompassing visual arts, dance, music, electronic literature, web art, and public art. 

    (Source: Boston Cyberarts Festival website)

    Judy Malloy - 05.07.2011 - 23:41

  9. Laura Shackelford

    Assistant Professor of English at Rochester Institute of Technology. 

    My research centers on the questions digital media practices and the global social formations they enable pose to understandings of self, community, gender, race, and nation that were elaborated in an age of print.  I am interested in theories of the posthuman as these raise crucial questions about the limits to various strains of humanism and encourage  active and critical thinking about what's human about the human in the past, present, and future.  I am especially interested in the contributions contemporary feminist and multicultural literature and theory and science fiction make to our understandings of the human as this work flags the shifting and often exclusionary practices that define and re-define the properly "human." 

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 07.07.2011 - 16:32

  10. Megan Heyward

    Megan Heyward is an Australian author, media artist and academic whose creative practice and research sits at the intersection of storytelling and new technologies. For over twenty years she has explored the potentials of narrative and interactivity, working across multiple media and formats; using text, image, video, sound animation to shape interactive works for electronic literature, locative media, augmented reality, hypertext, mobile apps and other emerging formats.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 27.07.2011 - 15:28

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