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  1. The Precession

    The Precession is a data-driven networked poem being developed simultaneously as both a large-scale installation and live performance. The work makes use of original writing and real-time data collection to create visual-poetic arrangements based on inquiries into architecture and the night sky. The piece mixes databased sources, real-time interruptions, and algorithmic composition in an evolving ecology.

    The Precession considers as a primary source Oskar J.W. Hansen's sculpture Winged Figures of the Republic permanently installed at the Hoover Dam. Hansen's 1935 work commemorates the building of the dam and includes a complex celestial map. Beginning with the date of the dam's dedication, the map contains the data for someone skilled in astronomy to accurately trace the position of the polestar each subsequent night for the next 26,000 years.

    The online work, in its current state of development, is mainly time-based taking approximately 20 minutes (with links to individual areas also accessible).

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 24.01.2011 - 17:46

  2. Canyonlands: Edward Abbey in the Great American Desert

    "Canyonlands" is a web-based, interactive project that blends text and video imagery on a vast, scrolling environment. Following in the footsteps of the novelist and essayist, Edward Abbey, users navigate paths through a desert landscape that is being overturned through dam-building, road-building, mining, and industrial tourism. The project combines maps, photos, archival films, original video, and many other elements on a scrolling, virtual landscape suggestive of the Colorado River, its canyon lands, and the deserts of Utah, Arizona and California. Users arrive in a desert American West in the 1950s. The work incorporates nonfiction materials in an artistic environment to offer an interdisciplinary blend of art, writing, and scholarship. Recorded in the deserts of Utah, Arizona and California.

    (Source: Author's description in the Electronic Literature Directory)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 18.02.2011 - 21:58

  3. Sea and Spar Between

    Sea and Spar Between is a poetry generator which defines a space of language populated by a number of stanzas comparable to the number of fish in the sea, around 225 trillion. Each stanza is indicated by two coordinates, as with latitude and longitude. The words in Sea and Spar Between come from Emily Dickinson’s poems and Herman Melville’s Moby Dick. Certain compound words (kennings) are assembled from words used frequently by one or both. Sea and Spar Between was composed using the basic digital technique of counting, which allows for the quantitative analysis of literary texts.

    (Source: Authors' abstract at Dear Navigator)

    Scott Rettberg - 16.03.2011 - 17:05

  4. Geo-Spatial Aesthetics: Time, Agency and Space in Electronic Writing

    Geo-Spatial Aesthetics: Time, Agency and Space in Electronic Writing

    Patricia Tomaszek - 19.05.2011 - 16:42

  5. Light & Dust: Polyaesthetic Experiences with Locative Augmented Reality

    Light & Dust: Polyaesthetic Experiences with Locative Augmented Reality

    Patricia Tomaszek - 19.05.2011 - 16:50

  6. Poetic Ergodic Capture

    This paper comments on a number of videos the presenter has shown at the e-poetry festival 2011. Bootz presents the concepts of noematic and ergodic reading, as well as the idea of "ergodic capture."

    Patricia Tomaszek - 19.05.2011 - 16:57

  7. The LA Flood Project

    The LA Flood Project is a [work in progress] locative media experience made up of three segments:

    1. Oral histories of crises in Los Angeles
    2. A locative narrative about a fictional flood
    3. A flood simulation

    (Source: Project site)

    Scott Rettberg - 20.05.2011 - 12:28

  8. This Is Not A Poem

    This work takes the poem "Trees" by Joyce Kilmer and, transcribing it onto a "scratchable" disk, makes it into a toy, a game, and a language engine.

    (Source: Author's description)

    Scott Rettberg - 20.05.2011 - 12:35

  9. The Archeological Media Lab: A Locavore Approach to Access & Preservation

    The paper describes the Archeological Media Lab, aligning it with the field of Media Archaeology (at the moment the best writings on M.A. in English are probably best found in Erkki Huhtamo and Jussi Parikka’s forthcoming Media Archaeology: Approaches, Applications, and Implications). The lab tries to take on a locavore approach to both sustaining and framing e-literature – one that is primarily hands-on and resolutely of the local, with only a very modest global or online presence.

    (Source: Adapted from author's site)

    Scott Rettberg - 20.05.2011 - 13:21

  10. Cross-­Referenced E-­Lit and Scholarship: The ELMCIP Knowledge Base

    The ELMCIP-Knowledge Base (Electronic Literature as a Model of Creativity and Innovation in Practice) provides researchers, students, and a general audience of electronic literature new ways of accessing existing scholarship in the field. With a special focus on cross-references, the relational database documents the field of research and creative practice in electronic literature. While focusing on the display of social entities and geographical roots, connections between actors and works in the communities field become visible. The strength of the database lies in the variety and cross-referenced nature of record types that feed the database: author, creative work, critical writing, event, organization, publisher, and teaching resources are being documented and referenced. In this talk, I will present suggestions how to integrate the ELMCIP-Knowledge Base into regular writing, research, and teaching practices.

    Scott Rettberg - 20.05.2011 - 13:25

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