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  1. Margaret Rhee

    Poet, artist, and scholar Margaret Rhee is the conceptualist for From the Center, a feminist HIV/AIDS digital storytelling program for incarcerated women in the San Francisco Jail. For the project, she was awarded the UC Berkeley Chancellor's Award for Public Service in 2014. Her other projects include serving as Lead Concept for The Turing Test Tournament, a digital game created for UC Berkeley's reading program. As a poet, Rhee is the author of Yellow (Tinfish Press, 2011) and Radio Hearts, Or How Robots Fall Out of Love (Finishing Line Press, 2015). She has been exploring the ways poetry can be visual and participatory through her installation project, A Feminist History of Kimchi and The Kimchi Poetry Machine. She holds a Ph.D. in ethnic and new media studies from UC Berkeley. Currently, she is a visiting assistant professor in women’s and gender studies at the University of Oregon

    Eirik Tveit - 06.09.2016 - 19:04

  2. Liza Daly

    Liza Daly

    Sondre Skollevoll - 08.09.2016 - 03:35

  3. Karen Villeda

    Karen Villeda was born in Tlaxcala, Mexico. She began publishing poems when she was 17 years old and has won many of Mexico’s most important prizes for young and emerging poets, including a Youth Prize of Mexico City, a Fine Arts Prize for Children's Fiction, and an Elías Nandino National Award for Youth Poetry.

    Her collections of poetry include Tesauro (2010), Babia (2011), Dodo (2013), and Constantinopla (2014). She has also translated John Keats’s “Lamia” into Spanish.

    Villeda is also a digital poet whose work appears in the third volume of the Electronic Literature Collection from MIT Press.

    She has received grants from the Young Creators Program of the National Fund for Culture and Arts and the Open Society Foundation. She currently participates in the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa.

    (Source:https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems-and-poets/poets/detail/karen-villeda)

    Susanne Dahl - 08.09.2016 - 10:03

  4. Denise Audirac

    Denise Audirac is interested in generative art, mainly in human interaction through data visualization and information design.

    (Source: http://collection.eliterature.org/3/work.html?work=poetuiteame)

    Susanne Dahl - 08.09.2016 - 10:04

  5. Brenda Neotenomie

    Brenda Neotenomie is a composer, graphic artist and game designer. Her works include “Bellular Hexatosis” and the OST for “With Those We Love Alive”.

    Susanne Dahl - 08.09.2016 - 11:22

  6. Helen Pritchard

    An artist and researcher. Central to her work are ideas of co-research, co-production and co-operation. Her projects often explore computational aesthetics, nonhuman sociality and queer data, often emerging as collaborative events and collective activities. Helen has shown work internationally including DA Fest International Festival of Digital Art, Spacex, Microwave International Media Arts Festival, Future Everything and Arnolfini Online. She is currently a PhD candidate, funded by the EPSRC in the school of Geography at Queen Mary and a researcher at Goldsmiths, University of London.

    Sebastian Cortes - 08.09.2016 - 15:39

  7. David Williamson Shaffer

    David Williamson Shaffer

    Susanne Dahl - 08.09.2016 - 15:45

  8. Rodolfo JM

    Narrator, editor, and industrial engineer. His books include All this happens under water and The love life of cicadas.

    Aspasia Manara - 08.09.2016 - 15:46

  9. Kurt R Squire

    Kurt Squire is a Professor of Digital Media in the Department of Curriculum & Instruction, and Co-Director of the Games+Learning+Society Center in the Wisconsin Institute for Discovery. Squire is the author or editor of three books, and over 75 scholarly publications on learning with technology. Squire has directed several game-based learning projects, ranging from ARIS, a tool for place-based mobile app development, to ProgenitorX, a game about saving the world from zombies through stem cell technology.

    (Source: https://www.gameslearningsociety.org/bio_kurt.php)

    Susanne Dahl - 08.09.2016 - 15:48

  10. Richard Halverson

    Richard Halverson is a Professor in Educational Leadership and Policy Analysis at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

    His work involves documenting the practical wisdom of school leaders with the tools and ideas of distributed leadership, and understanding how digital media tools (can) change teaching and learning in schools.

    (Source:http://website.education.wisc.edu/halverson/?page_id=16)

    I co-direct two federally funded projects that guide my research. First, I work with Kurt Squire on the National Science Foundation funded CyberSTEM project, which develops video-games for learning and investigates how the data that results from game-play can become evidence for learning and a catalyst for social interaction.

    Susanne Dahl - 08.09.2016 - 15:50

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