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  1. Having Your Story and Eating It Too: Affect and Narrative in Recombinant Fiction

    “Recombinant poetics”, a term coined by artist/scholar Bill Seaman, refers to a techo-poetic practice in which the display and juxtaposition of semantic elements are generated by computer algorithms, rather than through an author’s predetermined composition. Although inspired by traditions of combinatorial literature and the use of constraints to generate narrative or poetic forms, recombinant works of art produce variable “fields of meaning” (Seaman/Ascott) for the user. Recombinant authors program discrete semantic elements, media stored in arrays or databases, to display through random, semi-random or variable processes, often in conjunction with user-interaction. Examples of recombinant poetics in works of digital poetry and art are abundant. Digital narratives that foreground recombinant processes are less common, because they tend to dismantle or dissolve themselves as sequential narrative in favor of more non-linear, emergent meanings.

    David Wright - 28.08.2019 - 03:05

  2. Introduction (What (in the World) Was Postmodernism)

    Introduction (What (in the World) Was Postmodernism)

    Yvanne Michéle Louise Kerignard - 17.09.2019 - 14:41

  3. Glitching the Poem

    Glitching the Poem was presented at the 2016 elo conference.

    Ole Samdal - 26.11.2019 - 15:30

  4. Unprintable books

    Unprintable books was a session held at the 2016 ELO conference.

    Ole Samdal - 26.11.2019 - 15:58

  5. The Cyborg of the House

    The Cyborg of the House was presented at the 2016 ELO conference.

    Ole Samdal - 26.11.2019 - 16:32

  6. The Old in the Arms of the New

    Using historical recordings to create H for it is a pleasure and a surprise to breathe.” Electronic Literature Organization Conference and Festival: “

    Ole Samdal - 26.11.2019 - 16:42

  7. Space as a Meaningful Dimension

    Space as a Meaningful Dimension

    Ole Samdal - 26.11.2019 - 16:45

  8. Exploring potentiality

    Exploring potentiality was presented at the 2016 elo conference.

    Ole Samdal - 26.11.2019 - 17:53

  9. Session 4.5 Next Narrative

    Session 4.5 Next Narrative was held at the 2016 ELO conference

    •  
    • “The Neverending Story: Narrative Revisited, “Marjorie Luesebrink, Independent Artist
    • “Digital Narrative and the Event,” Daniel Punday, Independent Artist
    • “Virtually Narrative: Potential Narration in Digital Fiction,” Will Luers, Washington State University Vancouver

    Ole Samdal - 26.11.2019 - 20:20

  10. Storyspace 3

    Storyspace 3 works with existing Storyspace files and creates new Storyspace documents in a robust, state-of-the-art XML format. Legacy Storyspace work immediately takes advantage of Storyspace 3’s outstanding new typography.

    Storyspace 3 is a tool for writing and reading hypertext narrative, for fictional and nonfictional stories told with links. Long the tool of choice for serious hypertext writers, Storyspace now offers new features, new tools, and unmatched elegance for handling complex stories with ease.

    From the earliest experimental hypertexts, writers have learned that simply linking pages together isn’t enough. What works in small web sites leaves readers wandering and adrift in book-length environments. Storyspace solved the problem back in the 1990s with guard fields that activate and disable links as the reader moves through the document.

    Storyspace 3 supports classic Storyspace guard fields and extends them with a new, easy-to-learn syntax that adds lots of power and flexibility. You can mix old and new guard fields freely.

     

    Ole Kristian Sæther Skoge - 24.09.2021 - 19:13

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