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  1. Electronic Literature Collection, Volume 2 Launch

    On 2 May 2011, the Electronic Literature Research Group at the Department of Linguistic, Literary, and Aesthetic Studies, University of Bergen hosted two special events at the Bergen Public Library celebrating the launch of the Electronic Literature Collection, Volume 2. The Electronic Literature Collection, Volume 2 is an international anthology of more than 60 works of electronic literature published under a Creative Commons license online and on DVD.

    The publication of the Electronic Literature Collection, Volume 1 in 2006 had a significant impact on the field of electronic literature, giving readers and educators a common set of referents in the form of a diverse collection of literary works made for digital media. The ELC, Volume 2, published in 2011, offers new digital poetry, hypertext fiction, interactive fiction, multimedia documentaries, and a variety of other forms of electronic literature. The University of Bergen program in Digital Culture was one of the sponsors of the publication of the ELC 2 and will make use of it in its future courses.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 03.05.2011 - 14:13

  2. Reading Digital Literature

    A curtain of tiny screens quoting from live Internet chat; stories generated by computer programs; narratives generated by their readers; words that disappear or reveal themselves depending on their readers’ position, text that peels off the wall and requires the 'reader' to push it back. How shall we read such moving letters? How do we catch their meaning? How might they make us feel? The conference convenes ten specialists from the USA and Germany to explore these and other questions in depth.

    The conference resulted in the collection, Literary Art in Digital Performance: Case Studies and Critical Positions, edited by Francisco J. Ricardo (Conitinuum, 2009).

    (Source: Conference website)

     

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 28.09.2011 - 14:29

  3. Electronic Literature Reading at the Richard Hugo House

    An evening of e-lit readings and performances at the Richard Hugo House in Seattle, Washington. The event was organized as part of the Electronic Literature Exhibition at the 2012 MLA Conference.

    Note: The actual line-up at the event different slightly from both the online description of "Readings & Performances" and that in the PDF/printed catalog for the Electronic Literature Exhibition.

    Content of 1st video: 1:50 Jason Nelson with PLAY with the last days of DRAG RACING PUPPETS, 8:11 John Cayley with Pentameters for the Disillusion of the Vectoralists, 19:30 Jim Andrews with Seattle Drift, 25:55 Erin Costello & Aaron Angello with Poemedia, 36:38 Ian Bogost with A Slow Year: Game Poems.

    Content of 2nd video: 0:01 The Good Fortune Land, 10:45 Stephanie Strickland with The Ballad of Sand and Harry Soot, 19:58 Stephanie Strickland and Nick Montfort with Sea and Spar Between, 26:00 Nick Montfort with Taroko Gorge, 29:10 Mark Sample with Takei, George, 31:00 Flourish Klink with Fred & George.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 23.11.2011 - 11:57

  4. An Evening with Electronic Literature Organization

    The Electronic Literature Organization (ELO) presents an evening of multimedia, interactive performative-readings highlighting a broad range of born-digital literary forms, including game-inspired, collaborative, database, film/video, generative, and kinetic image work. The evening's presentations showcase five projects selected from the second Electronic Literature Collection, published in February 2011, and created by Oni Buchanan, Jhave, Illya Szilak, Sandy Baldwin, and collaborators Stephanie Strickland and Cynthia Lawson Jaramillo, with videos by Paul Ryan.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 12.12.2011 - 20:13

  5. Brown E-Fest 2006: A Celebration of New Literary Hypermedia

    Presentations, performances, and readings at the Literary Arts Program (Brown University), featuring, among others, premieres by students from Brown´s electronic writing courses.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 01.02.2012 - 15:06

  6. Autostart: A Festival of Digital Literature

    Celebrating the release of the Electronic Literature Collection, volume 1 presented by the MACHINE reading series. Conversation about writing and literature in the digital age, featuring poets: Charles Bernstein, Jena Osman, Bob Perelman, Ron Silliman. Workshops, readings, and performances, along with an "Electronic Writing Slam": A time to collaboratively write and to informally discuss forms, techniques, and technologies.

    Source: Festival Website

    Patricia Tomaszek - 03.02.2012 - 14:17

  7. New Directions in Digital Poetry Launch Party

    A celebration of Chris Funkhouser's New Directions in Digital Poetry, featuring presentations by Francisco J. Ricardo, editor of the Continuum book series, "International Texts in Critical Media Aesthetics," in which Funkhouser's book appeared, and other e-lit figures including John Cayley, Angela Ferraiolo, Mary Flanagan, Alan Sondheim, Stephanie Strickland, and others.

    Sound recordings are available from PennSound:

    http://writing.upenn.edu/pennsound/x/Funkhouser-New-Directions-2012.php

    Patricia Tomaszek - 05.02.2012 - 12:43

  8. ELMCIP Events 2010-12: Electronic Literature as a Model of Creativity and Innovation in Practice

    SEMINARS

    Performing Electronic Literature
    2012 May 4-5, hosted by the University College Falmouth

    • This seminar will investigate the relationship between e-literature/digital text and performance. Members of the ELMCIP project, international speakers, and practitioners will discuss the function and understanding of performativity and its relationship to digital literature through a series of papers, presentations and practical engagements.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 14.03.2012 - 20:52

  9. A Night at the Cybertexts

    This electronic literary reading was arranged as short films are on a festival reel. Each of the works briefly presented in this "reel-time" event was written since DAC 2000. The authors reading came from diverse backgrounds, having begun their electronic writing endeavors in StorySpace (Jackson, Moulthrop, Strickland), on the Web (Coverley, Gillespie, Memmott, Rettberg), in cybertext poetry using HyperCard (Cayley), in commercial gaming (Swigart), and in interactive fiction forms (Montfort).

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 10.05.2012 - 17:03

  10. Reading, Writing, and Programming E-­Lit, Parts 1 and 2

    READING, WRITING, AND PROGRAMMING ELIT

    Wednesday, June 18: Reading and Writing (morning); Programming (afternoon)

    Workshop Leaders: Deena Larsen (deenalarsen[at]yahoo.com) and Joshua Fisher (admin[at]appoet.org)

    This is an all-day event in three parts, consisting of presentations and hands-on activities. The first two parts are intended especially for beginners: anyone who does not have deep familiarity with electronic writing, or wishes to extend or deepen an initial encounter. The third part is meant for both beginners and more experienced members of the community. Participants in workshops taking place earlier in the day may join the afternoon session (Part Three) at no additional charge. Registration is limited to 20 for Parts One and Two, 25 for Part Three; participants are encouraged to bring laptops.

    Part One: Reading (one hour)

    Alvaro Seica - 22.08.2014 - 12:04

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