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  1. Interrupt II Studio

    In computing, an interrupt (IRQ) is a command sent to the central processor (CPU), demanding its attention and calling for the initiation of a new task. Interrupt 2012 is a three-day international studio celebrating writing and performance in digital media. It will feature readings, performances and screenings, along with Interrupt Discussion Sessions (IRQds), all aimed at investigating the theme of interruption in digital literary art and performance. Events will take place February 10-12, 2012 on the Brown University campus. Interrupt 2012 is organized by graduate and undergraduate students associated with Brown University’s Department of Literary Arts and RISD Digital+Media. As organizers, we are interested in the interruptions that digitally-mediated writing and performance can initiate, as well as in identifying the systematic functions that they can interrupt.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 27.01.2012 - 08:58

  2. 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

  3. PW12 Performance Writing Weekend

    The weekend comprises performances, readings, a workshop on Writing & Mapping, ‘events on the plinth', an exhibition and discussions about multi- and inter-medial writing. We will be considering how, as the printed book comes under threat, new writing will be made, displayed and talked about. See attached PDF full details.

    (Source: www.arnolfioni.org.uk)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 02.05.2012 - 16:21

  4. Translating E-Literature

    The first international conference on translating E-literature will take place from 12 to 14 June at the Universities of Paris 8 Vincennes-Saint-Denis and Paris 7 Diderot Denis. The conference is organized by OTNI: Objets textuels non identifiés (UTO: Unidentified Textual Objects), a research project into the evolution of textuality in the digital age. It is supported by the Electronic Literature Organization.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 01.06.2012 - 12:18

  5. Workshop on Curating and Exhibiting Electronic Literature

    This workshop, which will include participants from Bergen cultural institutions and UiB researchers, as well as international expert speakers, is intended to examine the growing trend towards the exhibition of electronic literature in art venues, such as museums and galleries, and to examine models of curating and exhibiting electronic literature in these environments. In addition to providing an opportunity for discussion and analysis of what happens to the situation of digital literary artifacts when they are presented in gallery environments, this workshop will provide an important planning opportunity.

    Scott Rettberg - 02.11.2012 - 12:10

  6. Exploring Paratexts in Digital Contexts

    This day-long workshop revolves around the notion of paratext, a literary theory first presented by French narratologist Gérard Genette in 1987 (Seuils / English translation "Paratexts. Thresholds of Interpretation" 1997).
    Originally envisioned in relation to manuscripts and printed text, the theory of paratext ambitioned to describe how texts materialise through the distribution and presentation of textual and contextual information that accompanies and structures text.
    In digital contexts, the paratextual dimension tends to exhibit new qualities.This workshop focuses on paratext theory in digital realms and explore how paratext may offer a common ground for scholars in information and library science and in other humanistic disciplines.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 07.12.2012 - 11:22

  7. Digital Methods Winter School 2013 and Mini-Conference

    The 2013 Digital Methods Winter School is devoted to emerging alternatives to big data. The Barcamp, Hackathon, Hack Day, Edit-a-thon, Data Sprint, Code Fest, Open Data Day, Hack the Government, and other workshop formats are sometimes thought of as "quick and dirty." The work is exploratory, only the first step, outputting indicators at most, before the serious research begins. However, these new formats also may be viewed as alternative infrastructures as well as approaches to big data in the sense of not only the equipment and logistics involved (hit and run) but also the research set-up and protocols, which may be referred to as "short-form method." The 2013 Digital Methods Winter School is dedicated to the outcomes and critiques of short-form method, and is also reflexive in that it includes a data sprint, where we focus on one aspect of the debate about short- vs. long-form method: data capture. To begin, at the Winter School the results of a data sprint from a week earlier (on counter-Jihadists) will be presented, including a specific short-form method for issue mapping.

    Scott Rettberg - 16.01.2013 - 21:35

  8. Collaborative Creativity in New Media -- Performance Night

    About This is a joint course, including students from UiB digital culture or related disciplines, and students from American partner institutions including the University of West Virginia, Temple University and the University of Minnesota at Duluth. The core activity of this course will be collaborative development of creative new media work in the field and the lab. The aim of the course is to provide students with practical hands-on experience in developing multimodal new media artifacts, involving text, image, audio, and video in a creative production environment. The course will further serve as introduction to theories and practices of collaborative creativity in interactive media. The main component of the course will be an intensive weeklong course. Students and faculty from the USA will join University of Bergen Digital Culture students and faculty during this work, and will also work together remotely during the semester to develop, finish, and report on the projects they initiate during the week of face-to-face meetings.

    Natalia Fedorova - 13.08.2013 - 16:13

  9. Visualizing Electronic Literature Seminar

    Visualizing Electronic Literature Seminar

    Patricia Tomaszek - 21.08.2013 - 19:27

  10. ELO 2014 Pre-Conference Events

    “Hold the Light” features a variety of pre-convention workshops offering unique opportunities for in-depth, practical involvement with concepts, approaches, and tools. Attendance at any of the workshops requires purchase of the Workshop Pass, either as part of your registration process or on site. All workshops are located on the UWM campus and will take place in advance of the main conference. The special INT workshop, held in collaboration with the Narrative Intelligence research group, will take place Tuesday and Wednesday, June 17-18. The other three workshops will run on Wednesday, June 18.

    Here are brief descriptions of the workshops. E-mail addresses are given for the workshop organizers, if you wish to contact them for further information.

    READING, WRITING, AND PROGRAMMING ELIT

    Wednesday, June 18: Reading and Writing (morning); Programming (afternoon)

    Workshop Leaders: Deena Larsen (deenalarsen[at]yahoo.com) and Joshua Fisher (admin[at]appoet.org)

    Alvaro Seica - 22.08.2014 - 11:54

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