Search

Search content of the knowledge base.

The search found 12 results in 0.008 seconds.

Search results

  1. Publish and Die: The Preservation of Digital Literature within the UK

    Publish and Die: The Preservation of Digital Literature within the UK

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 06.04.2011 - 11:23

  2. Archivability of Electronic Literature in Context

    Archivability of Electronic Literature in Context

    Jörgen Schäfer - 08.07.2011 - 10:50

  3. European eLiterature Collection

    The European eLiterature Collection is a project developed as part of The eLiterature Research Project. The aim of the collection is to provide an essential tool to assist in formalizing e-Literature in Europe.

    In this respect, the European eLiterature Collection Board of Editors, evaluates, reviews, and publishes on the web works of Electronic Literature by European authors.

    Fabio De Vivo - 22.10.2011 - 12:16

  4. Born-Again Bits: A Framework for Migrating Electronic Literature

    The intended audience of Born-Again Bits includes besides e-lit authors also the publishers, archivists, academics, programmers, and funding officers who will be necessary partners in an overall, renewable ecology of electronic literature. These other communities are already at work on digital preservation strategies. However, experimental e-lit has special qualities that make it an extreme case of the digital artifact. It is hoped that ELO's PAD initiative will contribute to other digital preservation strategies by ensuring that they accommodate e-lit and so, in the process, become more robust for all digital works.

    Scott Rettberg - 06.02.2012 - 15:04

  5. Cibertextualidades 5

    The impact of hypertext and hypermedia on scholarly editing of our literary legacy, which is increasingly published in electronic formats, has fostered a conceptual shift from the archive as a classified hierarchical collection of texts to the archive as a decentred and reconfigurable network of texts. Another important set of questions concerns new methods for editing and organizing multimodal textualities resulting from combinations of materials and media (graphic, audio, video, digital). The convergent multimodality of digital textuality opens up a new editing and archival space for multimedia and intermedia forms of writing. In the current technological context, innovative and experimental literary forms become relevant, as many of the operations that the machine provides can be found in previous literary practices: from collages and automatic writing to narrative permutations and intermedia poetry. This issue of the journal addresses problems of representing, archiving, and publishing experimental literary forms in digital spaces.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 02.07.2013 - 16:56

  6. Entity/Identity: A Tool Designed to Index Documents about Digital Poetry

    Entity/Identity: A Tool Designed to Index Documents about Digital Poetry

    Patricia Tomaszek - 10.10.2013 - 21:48

  7. Preservation of Digital Literary Works: Another Model of Memory?

    Preservation of Digital Literary Works: Another Model of Memory?

    Patricia Tomaszek - 10.10.2013 - 22:13

  8. Electronic Literature as Cultural Heritage (Confessions of an Incunk)

    This is the text of a talk given at the plenary panel at the Electronic Literature Showcase at the Library of Congress, curated by Kathi Inman Berens and Dene Grigar.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 22.10.2013 - 18:12

  9. Documenting Events and Works in the ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base

    This half-day workshop will be focused on the preservation and archiving of Electronic Literature Organization events and conferences. Scott Rettberg has been asked by the ELO board to establish a standing committee of ELO members that will be focused on documenting and archiving current and past ELO events. This workshop will be focused both on the future scope and projects of that committee and on the hands-on documentation of ELO conferences in the ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base. We will consider questions including:

    What are the best practices related to archiving for ELO conference organizers?
    Should relationships be established with one or more libraries or archives to preserve data and ephemera from ELO conferences?
    How should we best go about gathering ELO archives materials and preserving them?
    How can we archive events using the platform of the ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base?

    Hannah Ackermans - 29.10.2015 - 15:25

  10. Archiving Roundtable

    Listed as one of the main themes of the Bergen 2015 ELO conference is the following question: is “electronic literature” a transitional term that will become obsolete as literary uses of computational media and devices become ubiquitous? If so, what comes after electronic literature?

    The notion of obsolescence has been a recurring issue in electronic literature since at least 2002, the date of the ELO Conference at UCLA. At that time, archiving became a general concern in the field. ELO responded with documents such as Born-Again Bits, Acid-Free Bits, and the ELC 1 and 2 Collections. Since that time, with the continual evolution of computational media and devices, the problems of archiving have continued to grow more complicated. The panel proposes to address issues of Archiving based on this re-wording of the conference theme: is electronic literature a transitional practice that will become obsolete as the multiplication of forms of both computational media and devices make literary artifacts more and more difficult to preserve?

    Hannah Ackermans - 31.10.2015 - 10:54

Pages