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  1. Salon 12: December 10, 2020: Building an ELO Repository

    In an effort to preserve works of electronic literature, ELO has developed the ELO Repository that collects and/or manages online journals, works of electronic literature, community archives, and other digital materials for other organizations and makes them available to the public.  The development process, tools used, and the aims and purposes of the project were discussed.

    Hannah Ackermans - 06.04.2021 - 10:54

  2. NYU Bloomsday Reading at the Media Research Library, NYU

    A collaborative reading at the NYU Media Research Laboratory featuring Noah Wardrip-Fruin, Stephanie Strickland, Jennifer Ley, Bill Bly, Adrienne Wurtzel, Nick Montfort and William Gillespie, Rob Wittig, and the Unknown

    Scott Rettberg - 15.04.2021 - 00:17

  3. The Boston T1 Party at the Boston Public Library

    The Boston T1 Party was a hit! More than 100 people turned out and Bernie Margolis, president of the Boston Public Library, accepted copies of electronic literature works on physical media to add to the library's collection. The event featured, Adam Cadre and Dirk Stratton,William Gillespie, Talan Memmott, Rob Wittig, Noah Wardrip-Fruin, Scott Rettberg, M.D. Coverly, Shelley Jackson, Kurt Heintz, and Nick Montfort.

    Boston Public Library
    Rabb Auditorium
    6:30pm - 8:30pm
    Wednesday
    25 April 2001
    Admission: free

    Online writing is revolutionary - and no solitary affair. The Electronic Literature Organization presented award-winning authors reading from their projected work: Shelley Jackson's monster showed off her stitches, with the audience indicating which thread to follow. The Unknown let the audience yell out when they wanted to switch scenes. The Ed Report team offered a "press conference" about their mock government report. M.D. Coverley revealed "Hidden Places in Califia," reading the concealed beginning and ending of a story about a character the audience selects.

    Scott Rettberg - 15.04.2021 - 00:33

  4. Platforming Utopias (and Platformed Dystopias)

    Platforming Utopias (and Platformed Dystopias)

    Scott Rettberg - 20.05.2021 - 09:34

  5. Danny Fitzgerald

    Danny Fitzgerald

    Daniel Johannes Flaten Rosnes - 25.05.2021 - 19:35

  6. Yuzhu Chai

    Graduated from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Yuzhu Chai is an artist, creative technologist, and an active member of the creative coding community. Using code to explore the possibilities of poetics via the materiality of text, her work spans visual art, computation, language and storytelling, and education. Her collaborative research project on Digital Narrative, Documents, and Interactive Public History was published via the ICIDS conference.

    (Source: ELO 2021)

    Alvaro Seica - 27.05.2021 - 15:01

  7. Carlo Perrotta

    Carlo Perrotta

    Daniel Johannes Flaten Rosnes - 17.06.2021 - 22:25

  8. Salon June 8 2021: Playable Comms

    Playable Comms is an interdisciplinary, collaborative network of projects with the aim of examining interactive digital narratives (IDNs) as tools for educating audiences on topics of science and health. More specifically, the research evaluates the efficacy of using IDNs for health and sci-comm, attempting to measure message uptake from outright rejection to holistic adoption engendering associated behavioural change. As a practice-based practitioner/researcher composing IDNs and evaluating their efficacy on multiple projects, I aim to develop a model for health and science communication through reading and writing IDNs that can be implemented in a wide array of scenarios and topic areas.

    Hannah Ackermans - 06.08.2021 - 15:53

  9. Salon July 13 2021: Structuring Metadata for Born-Digital Literature for The NEXT: What Artists, Editors, Scholars, and Collectors Need to Know

    This presentation details how to structure metadata about born-digital literature for collections in The NEXT. It introduces the extended metadata schema the Electronic Literature Lab (ELL) utilizes for The NEXT, showing both how information displays on the front end of the spaces, as well as organized on the back end for the database.

    Leading the discussion is Dene Grigar, Director of ELL and the Managing Director and Curator of The NEXT, and Richard Snyder, Assistant Director of ELL and the Metadata Specialist for The NEXT.

    If you currently have works held in The NEXT or are thinking of donating them in the future, this presentation will shed light on the process undertaken to ensure works are accessible and provide precise information about them. Participants will leave the presentation with a copy of both the schema ELL is using and an metadata spreadsheet template for their own use.

    8:00-8:10        Introductions—Dene

    8:10-8:30        Metadata on the Front End—Dene

    8:30-8:50        Metadata on the Back End—Richard

    Hannah Ackermans - 06.08.2021 - 16:05

  10. Panikos Panayi

    Panikos Panayi is Professor of European History. He was born in a Greek Cypriot family which migrated to Britain. He completed his PhD at the University of Sheffield in 1988 on "Germans in Britain during the First World War, 1914-1918" under the supervision of Professor Colin Holmes and is part of the informally recognised Sheffield School of Migration and Prejudice. He is cultural historian and has worked at De Montfort University, Leicester since 1990, becoming professor of European history there in 1999. He writes on the social history of food and immigration. His books have been translated into German, French, and Japanese.

    Alisa Nikolaevna Ammosova - 29.09.2021 - 14:38

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