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  1. flâneur - tag the world

    Participatory locative literature project

    Anders Løvlie - 21.09.2010 - 11:28

  2. Arteroids

    Author description: Arteroids is a literary shoot-em-up for the Web, a work of software art and various odd literary devices. You use the arrow keys to drive your blood-red id-entity word ‘poetry’ or ‘desire’ (or whatever word you choose) around the full screen and use the ‘x’ key to shoot blue and green texts that assail you at various velocities and densities as you play. It is the battle of poetry against itself and the forces of dullness. 

    There are at least three versions of this work: 

    • Version 2.02 was published in Turbulence in 2002
    • Version 2.03 was published in the Museum of the Essential and Beyond That in 2004, but it was produced in 2002 and includes a Portuguese translation by Regina Celia Pinto
    • Version 2.5 was published in Poems That Go in 2003

     

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 04.03.2011 - 22:08

  3. FILMTEXT 2.0

    FILMTEXT 2.0 is an elaborate work of net art that investigates emerging forms of electronic literature in relation to interactive cinema, live A/V performance, games, and remix culture. It remediates formal experiments from older media like film, video art, and the visual/metafiction novel.

    (Source: Author's abstract at narrabase.net)

    "FILMTEXT" is a digital narrative created for cross-media platforms. It is has appeared as a museum installation, a net art site, a conceptual art ebook, an mp3 concept album, and a series of live A/V performances. In the initial 1.0 iteration of the net art site, commissioned by PlayStation 2 in conjunction with Amerika's "How To Be An Internet Artist" retrospective at the Institute of Contemporary Art in London, Amerika referred to "FILMTEXT" as "the third part of my new media trilogy," following his two other major works of Internet art, "GRAMMATRON" and "PHON:E:ME." 

    (Source: Description for the 2008 ELO Media Arts show)

    Scott Rettberg - 16.03.2011 - 16:51

  4. The Broadside of a Yarn

    The Broadside of a Yarn is a multi-modal performative pervasive networked narrative attempt to chart fictional fragments of new and long-ago stories of near and far-away seas with naught but a QR reader and a hand-made map of dubious accuracy. This project may perhaps be best understood as an assemblage of interrelated narrative elements mediated across a continuum forms - a collection of stories, a folio of broadsides, or an unbound atlas of impossible maps composed of a combination of historical sources, interspersed with "found" images, quotations from well known sailors’ yarns, and my own drawings and photographs, and fiction. These printed maps are embedded with QR codes link mobile devices to computer-generated narrative dialogues which may then serve as scripts for poli-vocal performances, and/or suggest a series of imprecise pervasive performative walks. This project is, in a Situationist sense, a wilfully absurd endeavour. How can I, a displaced native of rural Nova Scotia (New Scotland), perform the navigation of a narrative route through urban Edinburgh (Old Scotland)?

    Elisabeth Nesheim - 24.08.2012 - 12:09

  5. The Policeman's Beard is Half-Constructed

    With the exception of this introduction, the writing in this book was all done by a computer. The book has been proofread for spelling but otherwise is completely unedited. The fact that a computer must somehow communicate its activities to us, and that frequently it does so by means of programmed directives in English, does suggest the possibility that we might be able to compose programming that would enable the computer to find its way around a common language "on its own" as it were. The specifics of the communication in this instance would prove of less importance than the fact that the computer was in fact communicating something. In other words, what the computer says would be secondary to the fact that it says it correctly.

    (Source: from Bill Chamberlain's introduction at Ubuweb)

    Scott Rettberg - 25.08.2012 - 14:13

  6. AutoSummarize

    The top 100 most downloaded copyright free books summarized using Microsoft Word 2008’s AutoSummarize 10-sentence function and organized alphabetically.

    “Word has examined the document and picked the sentences most relevant to the main theme.” - Word 2008

    (Source: Project description)

    Scott Rettberg - 05.11.2012 - 16:19

  7. Blending the Crossword with the Narrative: An Examination of the Storygame

    Interactive narrative cannot be understood as only literature or as only game, nor even as a combative relationship between the two. Narrative-oriented "games" are neither novel nor movie, but they are likewise significantly different beasts than conventional, competitive games. They rather draw elements from both. We will come to terms with the concept of the storygame by examining the historical role of games in stories and stories in games to come to understand how the two forms combined into the modern storygame, focusing on the key traits of interactivity and immersion.

    Scott Rettberg - 07.01.2013 - 22:47

  8. Storyspace 1

    Storyspace, a hypertext writing environment, has been widely used for writing, reading, and research for nearly fifteen years. The appearance of a new implementation provides a suitable occasion to review the design of Storyspace, both in its historical context and in the context of contemporary research. Of particular interest is the opportunity to examine its use in a variety of published documents, all created within one system, but spanning the most of the history of literary hypertext.

    EDITOR'S NOTE: This paper is interesting for the technical background it provides on many often-analysed works of electronic literature.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 28.06.2013 - 14:49

  9. Ce livre qui n'en est pas un: le texte littéraire électronique

    Un texte littéraire électronique est écrit en code et ne peut exister sous forme imprimée. C’est une forme spécifique qui existe depuis la création dans les années 1970 des jeux d’aventures textuels (Willie Crowther et Don Woods, Adventure). Elle s’est développée de par l’exploitation de liens hypertextuels (Shelley Jackson, Patchwork Girl), d’éléments hypermédias, et s’oriente à présent vers la sophistication croissante des moyens mis en œuvre pour que le lecteur participe à la création de l’œuvre (Stuart Moulthrop, Pax). Le rapport entre jeux et textes reste très fort, au point que certains arguent que les jeux d’ordinateur actuels sont des œuvres littéraires électroniques. La forme est hantée par la fragilité de ses supports, et son économie semble reposer sur la gratuité.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 02.07.2013 - 15:10

  10. Literature in a State of Emergency

    Giorgio Agamben has identified the “State of Exception” as the emergent principle of governance for the 21st Century. To summarize Agamben’s argument, alongside the emergence of modern theories of governance (democratic societies with defined human rights), a state of permanent emergency has been declared in response to the various threats (terrorism, ecological disasters, migration, etc.) that have enabled an exception to the rule to persist as the emerging norm. Parallel to this crisis in politics, there is the increasing currency of the term emergence in literary criticism, media theory, and cultural studies to describe the general state of change. Increasingly, this term is used to describe change as a benign and specifically digital determinism. This paper will consider electronic literature as both a laboratory for formal innovation and a site of critique.

    Scott Rettberg - 25.09.2013 - 12:36

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