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  1. Jaime Levy

    Jaime Levy Russell, formerly Jaime Levy, is an interface designer and user experience strategist who is best known for her groundbreaking new media projects in the 1990s. Most notable projects include her creation of the floppy disk distributed with Billy Idol’s album Cyberpunk, WORD an online magazine, and an online cartoon series, CyberSlacker.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 27.07.2011 - 20:57

  2. Mike Watt

    Mike Watt is an American bass guitarist, singer and songwriter. He is best-known for co-founding the rock bands Minutemen, dos, and Firehose; as of 2003, he is also the bassist for the reunited Stooges and a member of the art rock/jazz/punk/improv group Banyan as well as many other post-Minutemen projects.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 27.07.2011 - 21:09

  3. Margot Lovejoy

    Margot Lovejoy is a digital artist and historian of art and technology. She is Professor Emerita of Visual Arts at the State University of New York at Purchase and author of the books Digital Currents: Art in the Electronic Age and Postmodern Currents: Art and Artists in the Age of Electronic Media.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 27.07.2011 - 21:51

  4. Laurie Anderson

    Laura Phillips "Laurie" Anderson (born 5 June 1947) is an influential American experimental performance artist, composer and musician who plays violin and keyboards and sings in a variety of experimental music and art rock styles. (source: Wikipedia)

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 27.07.2011 - 22:19

  5. Carole Lipsyc

    Carole Lipsyc est l’auteur du dispositif 3 Espaces.

    Elle a élaboré les concepts de Topos et de Récit Variable qui sont à l’origine de l’ensemble du projet et de la démarche. Elle a construit l’architecture du récit et son cadre narratif. Elle a également écrit le noyau liminaire du récit, les quelques mille textes qui ont pour fonction de servir de levain à l’écriture coopérative.

    Carole Lipsyc explore d’abord l’écriture pour l’audiovisuel et le théâtre (Dépendance, 1999, Passagères, 2000). C’est en concevant un magazine de feuilletons littéraires pour Internet (Boboz, 2001), qu’elle commence ses travaux sur l'écriture hypermédia et ses enjeux socio-artistiques.

    Avant de se dédier à l’écriture, elle a travaillé et publié dans le champ de l’éducation, de la formation et du coaching.

    Carole Lipsyc a rejoint l'Université Paris 8 et le Laboratoire Paragraphe où elle est doctorante.

    (Source: bio at 3espaces.com)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 12.08.2011 - 10:21

  6. Katharine Norman

    Katharine Norman is at times a composer, writer, teacher and sound artist – in no particular order. She has a particular interest in acoustic ecology, listening, sound and place, and her work traverses several creative disciplines, with an emphasis on sound and text.After moving between academia and publishing posts for some years she currently works in digital publishing for the Public Library of Science, an Open Access Science journal publisher. She continues her creative work as an independent artist and scholar, and as honorary Visiting Research Fellow at De Montfort University.For more information and online works (sound and text): www.novamara.com

    Katharine Norman - 16.08.2011 - 23:41

  7. ISEA2010 RUHR

    ISEA2010 RUHR, the 16th International Symposium on Electronic Art, took place from 20–29 August 2010 in the cities of Dortmund, Essen and Duisburg. ISEA is one of the most important international festivals for digital and electronic art and was hosted in Germany for the first time, as part of the programme of RUHR.2010, European Capital of Culture. More than eight hundred artists and scientists from over fifty countries came together to present the latest developments in contemporary art and digital culture at the ISEA2010 RUHR exhibitions, lectures, concerts and workshops. Thousands of visitors from the Ruhr region and beyond took part in the numerous events. (Source: ISEA2010 website)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 22.08.2011 - 10:25

  8. Vilém Flusser

    Vilém Flusser was a Czech-born philosopher and journalist who lived and worked in Brazil and later France. Flusser wrote primarily in German, Portuguese, and French on a wide range of subjects, including migration, photography, anthropology, and communication. In the decade and a half since his death, translations of Flusser's books began appearing in English. Subsequently, Flusser has been heralded as a pioneering philosopher of media studies.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 22.08.2011 - 15:20

  9. Edward Picot

    I was born in 1958. Originally I come from Hertfordshire in the UK, but I now live in Kent, with my wife and one daughter. In 1992 I was awarded a Ph.D in English Literature, and in 1997 I published my thesis in book-form, under the title Outcasts from Eden: Ideas of Landscape in British Poetry since 1945. Since the year 2000, when I set up my first website, I've been working in the health service and self-publishing online in my spare time. I started my second website, The Hyperliterature Exchange, in 2003: it's a review and directory of hyperliterature for sale on the Web, with links to the places where it can be bought. I try to publish something new every month: it used to be a piece of criticism one month, followed by a piece of creative work the next, but I haven't been able to stick to that schedule for a while now. All the same, it still feels very important to me to balance my creative work with occasional critical essays. Many of my recent creative pieces have been either entirely or partially inspired by the games I play with my daughter Rachel. They therefore feature a lot of jokes and toys.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 24.08.2011 - 10:22

  10. Alan Liu

    Alan Liu is Chair and Professor in the English Department at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and an affiliated faculty member of UCSB’s Media Arts & Technology graduate program. Previously, he was on the faculty of Yale University’s English Department and British Studies Program. He began his research in the field of British romantic literature and art. His first book, Wordsworth: The Sense of History (Stanford Univ. Press, 1989), explored the relation between the imaginative experiences of literature and history. In a series of theoretical essays in the 1990s, he explored cultural criticism, the “new historicism,” and postmodernism in contemporary literary studies. In 1994, when he started his Voice of the Shuttle Web site for humanities research, he began to study information culture as a way to close the circuit between the literary or historical imagination and the technological imagination. In 2004, he published his The Laws of Cool: Knowledge Work and the Culture of Information (Univ. of Chicago Press). Recently published from Univ. of Chicago Press is Local Transcendence: Essays on Postmodern Historicism and the Database.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 02.09.2011 - 14:14

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