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  1. False Pretenses, Parasites, and Monsters

    A meditation on parasites and montrosity in American novels and hypertext fictions.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 15.03.2011 - 15:57

  2. Textual Material in the Digital Medium

    Textual Material in the Digital Medium

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 23.03.2011 - 14:31

  3. Letters That Matter: Electronic Literature Collection Vol 1

    John Zuern considers the significance of the first volume of ELO's Electronic Literature Collection for the future of electronic arts.

    (Source: ebr)

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 24.03.2011 - 22:30

  4. In Search of Novel Poetic Territories: On Media Poetry: An International Anthology

    In Search of Novel Poetic Territories: On Media Poetry: An International Anthology

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 07.04.2011 - 12:14

  5. Code.surface || Code.depth

    This essay begins by identifying a central idea in the critical discourse on code art and code poetry: code is a deep structure that instantiates a surface. The AP Project’s Jonathan Kemp and Martin Howse, for example, explain that their work makes “manifest underlying systematics,” that can make the digital “physical, audible and visible through geological computing.” In what sense, if at all, can we trace a computing operation down to a foundation, bottom, or core? Why do we maintain this cultural imaginary of code and how has it come into being? Moreover, how have the metaphors of software engineering – particularly the notion of structured layers and multitier architectures – been put to artistic use? The thematizing of layers, surfaces, and spatial metaphors has become quite intricate in new media writing practices, as I will demonstrate in a reading of “Lascaux.Symbol.ic,” one of Ted Warnell’s Poems by Nari, and recent projects by John Cayley, including Overboard and Translation.

    Rita Raley - 05.05.2011 - 16:06

  6. The Monstrous Book and the Manufactured Body in the Late Age of Print

    The Monstrous Book and the Manufactured Body in the Late Age of Print: Material Strategies for Innovative Fiction in Shelley Jackson’s Patchwork Girl and Steve Tomasula’s VAS: An Opera in Flatland 

    Patricia Tomaszek - 06.05.2011 - 14:51

  7. Dichtung Digital 40

    This edition reflects upon the need of techniques to approach the ongoing upheavals taking place in today's technology-driven production of (literary) art. The contributions assembled here all discuss ways of reading cultural objects created with digital media. The objects of interest are: a computer game (Soderman), a performance of a work that houses and visualizes its literary artifacts on a website - a huge database of texts by different authors (Rettberg), default settings and electronic poetics in an age of technological determinism (Heckman), literary artifacts in between book and programmable media (Vincler), story-telling in the Gulf (Lenze), and signs in a culture of mashups (Navas). In a time when cultural objects in digital culture reconfigure the reception of their addressees, it is important to develop not only a proper understanding of the impact of these ruptures on literary communication but also an interpretation of the presented moves into the scope of scholarly discussion. Such an engagement calls for what Roberto Simanowski proposes in his contribution: "digital hermeneutics."

    Patricia Tomaszek - 06.05.2011 - 18:42

  8. The Gravity of the Leaf: Phenomenologies of Literary Inscription in Media-Constituted Diegetic Worlds

    John Cayley reports on writing and the practice of literary art in the immersive 3D audio-visual environment of the Cave at Brown University, addressing the use of text-as-surface in a three-dimensional space. He develops a conception of new media as “complex surfaces” based on Cave writing courses to confront the relationship between language and embodiment, language and materiality—always attempting to develop a specific literary aesthetics.

    (Source: Beyond the Screen, introduction by Jörgen Schäfer and Peter Gendolla)

    Scott Rettberg - 23.05.2011 - 15:10

  9. Inner Workings: Code and Representations of Interiority in New Media Poetics

    'Inner Workings' addresses itself to the methods, properties and practices of writing systems, including human writing systems, whose very signifiers are programmed. What does programmed signification tell us about the inner human writing machine? John Cayley's essay participates in relevant metacritical and metapsychological discussions - reexamining Freud's Mystic Writing Pad in particular - and is specifically sited within the context of debates on code and codework in literal art. Rather than revealed interiority, code is the archive and guarantee of inner workings than reside beneath the complex surfaces of poetics in programmable media.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 27.05.2011 - 23:29

  10. Technotexuality: An Interview with N. Katherine Hayles and Anne Burdick

    Interview with the author and designer of Writing Machines.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 28.05.2011 - 01:08

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