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  1. “It’s Not That, It’s Not That, It’s Not That”: Reading Digital Poetry

    "I’m attracted to the openness of interpretation and creation in digital poetry.  With such digital poems as Annie Abrahams “Being Human” and Maria Mencia’s “Birds Singing Other Birds Songs” it’s now commonplace to declare that we cannot say for sure whether these poems are poems, whether the poets are poets.  We cannot even say who is poet and who is machine, who is reader and who is writer let alone what the poem means. We certainly cannot say how to judge these poems, where they fit in relation to literary studies.  I should also say, though, that I dread this openness it at the same time as I’m attracted to it--this struggle to overcome an attachment to sure-footedness, to turn away from the safety of a backward-looking study of what’s been sanctioned as history, and emerge into new modes of relation."

    Source: cited from the introduction to the presentation

    Patricia Tomaszek - 03.02.2012 - 16:54

  2. E-Poetry: Time and Language Changes

    E-Poetry: Time and Language Changes

    Scott Rettberg - 10.07.2013 - 14:38