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  1. The Presumed Literariness of Digital

    This presentation will challenge the current, too quickly determined relationship between
    the ‘literary’ and digital media. The presumed literariness of digital art--these days, anything
    from performance art to virtual sculpture work--muddles the already confused and meandering
    genre of electronic literature, leading away from acts of reading and remarking on text and its location in new media. Electronic literature began as a study of literary writing produced and
    meant to be read on a computer screen, opening up new possibilities for interactive and dynamic
    storytelling, utilizing the new medium’s ability for linking lexias. The literariness of this work
    is manifest: the work was primarily textual, the centrality of reading paramount. Textuality was
    at the heart of the work, thus the term electronic literature was appropriate and uncontested.
    Lately, ‘electronic literature’ is an umbrella-term for all things digital. A spectrum of genres
    and forms are included, among them video games, interactive fiction, digital art, and (virtual)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 19.06.2012 - 14:41

  2. Anti-Spam: Reinventing Data

    Today, where information is continually transferred in the form of data, the word “information” has all but been exchanged for the word “data.” This shift of terms has aided in effectively transforming the world into a network-world of data. In many areas, and for many professionals, condensing information has become an almost exclusive preoccupation. This need to condense information through selecting and summarizing events—via the use of statistics, infography, visualization software, reports, databases, and animations—has dominated our mental landscape; it dominates the way we structure our perception of reality. Therefore, it is important to rethink what this phenomenon represents and how artists are responding to it. In this network-world of data, spam (which is unsolicited e-mail or electronic data sent en mass) has become one of the symbols representing the flux of disinformation, and/or unsolicited, information. Anti-spam is, therefore, a method of eliminating and screening the source data, a tool I call impedance. If we apply this point of view to contemporary art, we could consider the works of Pavel Braila, R.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 15.02.2013 - 13:56