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  1. The Bloomsbury Handbook of Electronic Literature

    The digital age has had a profound impact on literary culture, with new technologies opening up opportunities for new forms of literary art from hyperfiction to multi-media poetry and narrative-driven games. Bringing together leading scholars and artists from across the world, The Bloomsbury Handbook of Electronic Literature is the first authoritative reference handbook to the field.

    Crossing disciplinary boundaries, this book explores the foundational theories of the field, contemporary artistic practices, debates and controversies surrounding such key concepts as canonicity, world systems, narrative and the digital humanities, and historical developments and new media contexts of contemporary electronic literature. Including guides to major publications in the field, The Bloomsbury Handbook of Electronic Literature is an essential resource for scholars of contemporary culture in the digital era.

    (Source: Publisher's description)

    Alvaro Seica - 09.02.2018 - 12:33

  2. The Freedom Adventure of Portuguese Experimentalism and Kinetic Poetry

    The Freedom Adventure of Portuguese Experimentalism and Kinetic Poetry

    Ana Castello - 27.04.2018 - 14:25

  3. Humor & Constraint in Electronic Literature

    Humor & Constraint in Electronic Literature

    Carlos Muñoz - 03.10.2018 - 15:23

  4. Third Generation Electronic Literature

    We are witnessing the emergence of a third generation of electronic literature, one that breaks with the publishing paradigms and e-literatury traditions of the past and present.

    N. Katherine Hayles first historicized electronic literature by establishing 1995 as the break point between a text heavy and link driven first generation and a multimodal second generation “with a wide variety of navigation schemes and interface metaphors” (“Electronic Literature: What Is It?”). Even though Hayles has since rebranded the first wave of electronic literature as “classical,” generational demarcations are still useful, especially when enriching the first generation with pre-Web genres described by Christopher Funkhouser in ​Prehistoric Digital Poetry​ and others. My paper redefines the second generation as one aligned with Modernist poetics of innovation by creating interfaces and multimodal works in which form is invented to fit content.

    Hannah Ackermans - 04.12.2018 - 13:40