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  1. ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base

    The ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base is a research resource for electronic literature. An open-access, contributory database developed in Drupal 7, it provides cross-referenced, contextualized information about authors, creative works, critical writing, events, organizations, publishers, teaching resources, and databases and archives.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 13.04.2012 - 15:48

  2. Electronic Literature Directory

    The Electronic Literature Directory (ELD 2.0) is a collection of literary works, descriptions, and keywords. As the Web evolves, the work of literature co-evolves in ways that need to be named, tagged, and recognized in a Web 2.0 environment. For this purpose, the ELD is designed to bring authors and readers together from a wide a range of imaginative, critical, technological, and linguistic practices.

    Both a repository of works and a critical companion to e-literature, the ELD hosts discussions that are capable of being referenced and revised over years of use. In this respect, Directory content differs from blogs and wikis in that each entry, once it is approved by a board of editors, is unchanging. The submission of entries and their evaluation is open to anyone, and any entry can be supplemented if a later reader can successfully advance an alternative vision of the work and its context.

    (Source: ELD, About the Directory)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 13.04.2012 - 17:28

  3. Pathfinders: Documenting the Experience of Early Digital Literature

    This presentation outlines the work currently underway to preserve early digital literature authored by Stuart Moulthrop, Judy Malloy, John McDaid, Shelley Jackson, and Bill Bly. Entitled “Pathfinders: Documenting the Experience of Early Digital Literature,” the project is led by Dene Grigar (Washington State University Vancouver) and Stuart Moulthrop (University of Wisconsin––Milwaukee). It is a digital preservation project that aims to capture an important moment in literary history: the development of early digital literature. As such, it seeks to enrich our understanding of key texts from that moment and pioneer methods that can be used to preserve and explore other examples of participatory media. Starting from the premise that much of electronic literature is interactive and, so, is predicated on reader’s experience, the project focuses on the production of documentary video recordings of readers as they engage with five works of early computational literature involving multi-path reading strategies, dating from the crucial period of invention that preceded popularization of the Internet (roughly 1985-99).

    Dene Grigar - 13.06.2014 - 19:14