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  1. What Comes After Electronic Literature?

    Five minute lightning talks addressing the question: What comes after electronic literature?

    Steven Wingate: eLit and the Borg: the challenges of mainstreaming and commercialization
    Leonardo Flores: Time Capsules for True Digital Natives
    Maya Zalbidea, Xiana Sotelo and Augustine Abila: The Feminist Ends of Electronic Literature
    Mark Sample: Bad Data for a Broken World
    José Molina: Translating E-poetry: Still Avant-Garde
    Daria Petrova and Natalia Fedorova: 101 mediapoetry lab
    Judd Morrissey: Turesias (Odds of Ends)
    Jose Aburto: Post Digital Interactive Poetry: The End of Electronic Interfaces
    Andrew Klobucar: Measure for Measure: Moving from Narratives to Timelines in Social Media Networking
    David Clark: The End of Endings
    Damon Baker: "HAPPINESS FOR EVERYBODY, FREE, AND NO ONE WILL GO AWAY UNSATISFIED!": New Developments in the CaveWriting Hypertext Editing System

    (source: ELO 2015 conference catalog)

    Hannah Ackermans - 31.10.2015 - 11:31

  2. Boolean Poetics: The Search String as Post-Literary Technique

    Over the past decade, expanding access to Big Data has produced a number of innovations in electronic literature and digital culture more broadly, ranging from Twitter bots, media art and generative poetry utilizing social data to vernacular creative writing, journalism and fictocriticism on platforms such as Tumblr and BuzzFeed. These divergent modes of expression all rely on the ability to find and sort high-volume, real-time, multimodal digital data – for example tweets, Instagram photos, animated GIFs, YouTube videos, SoundCloud audio tracks and more – and recombine them in novel works of bricolage. Yet despite the increasing prominence of these writing practices, they have received scant scholarly attention.

    Hannah Ackermans - 16.11.2015 - 10:16