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  1. Imagination, Eventhood, and the Literary Absolute

    The three papers in this panel seek to move beyond primarily formalistic discussions of electronic literature as well as approaches primarily concerned with drawing definitional boundaries for it. Instead, they propose to explore various works of electronic literature in terms of the potential dialogue they may open with concepts that are often locatable outside or beyond the current critical boundaries of electronic literature.

    Hannah Ackermans - 11.11.2015 - 16:53

  2. Rhematics and the Literariness of Electronic Literature

    In Gerard Genette’s (1993; 1997) narratology, “rheme” is contrasted with “theme.” While themes are symbolic indications of what texts mean, rhemes are super-formal indications of texts themselves. The title of this article is highly thematic because it indicates much of that what is being discussed; a title like “Only an Article” would be highly rhematic due to its lack of indication of the subject matter at the expense of non-reflective form.

    Veli-Matti Karhulahti has recently argued that the aesthetics of the videogame phenomenon are better understood through “rhematics” than the rhetoric of “meaning” that has so far dominated the analysis of cultural products, especially within literary studies:

    Hannah Ackermans - 27.11.2015 - 14:48

  3. The Challenge of Visuality for Electronic Literature

    Whilst there may be aesthetic tropes within digital media, there is no universally accepted authority within contemporary culture nor is there an easy mutual acceptance of what is “right and proper” or indeed legitimate outside the now virtue of being popular and well followed. Indeed the now bodily distanced and disinhibited digital citizen frequently demonstrates a palpable distain for the elite and pretentious (1). Considering this, any community with Literature in its name may have an identity problem; literariness still pertains to an elevated quality of artistic or intellectual merit and is thus counter to popular cultural production. In addition, mainstream culture has successfully commoditized many counter-cultural communities (2). Electronic Literature has arguably not been through such commodification processes, and the question of interest is why not? To that extent this paper seeks to explore possible answers.

    Hannah Ackermans - 28.11.2015 - 14:33

  4. The Computational Sublime in Nick Montfort's ‘Round’ and ‘All the Names of God’

    What if the post-literary also meant that which operates in a literary space (almost) devoid of
    language as we know it: for instance, a space in which language simply frames the literary or
    poetic rather than ‘containing’ it? What if the countertextual also meant the (en)countering of
    literary text with non-textual elements, such as mathematical concepts, or with texts that we
    would not normally think of as literary, such as computer code? This article addresses these
    issues in relation to Nick Montfort’s #!, a 2014 print collection of poems that presents readers with the output of computer programs as well as the programs themselves, which are designed to operate on principles of text generation regulated by specific constraints. More specifically, it focuses on two works in the collection, ‘Round’ and ‘All the Names of God’, which are read in relation to the notions of the ‘computational sublime’ and the ‘event’.

    (Source: Author's Abstract)

    Mario Aquilina - 13.01.2016 - 10:57