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  1. Speeches and poemas

    Speeches and Poemas (Félix Remírez, 2006) is a digital bilingual poetry digital book divided into five parts. In the first one, Versos en la arena –Verses in the Sand- the multimedia digital possibilities are used to combine a series of sonnets and poems with the sound and vision of waves dying in the and. In the second, Raining Thoughts, the reader has to interact with a storm to extract its clouds-phrases and thoughts, all between the ambient sound of a storm. The third part, From my lips, is a review of a digital automatic writing that creates grammatically correct texts which do not make real sense. The fourth part, Image and Works, combines images in motion with verses inspired from each of the images. In English and Spanish the reader interacts with the images trying to choose the one that can be more interesting. In the end, La luz de la palabra –The Light of the Word-obliges the reader to find each poem little by little, as if he/she were reading with a candle. The work uses Javascript resources and there is music in each part of it.

    Maya Zalbidea - 31.07.2014 - 14:43

  2. #! [Shebang]

    The title of this book, pronounced “shebang,” consists of the first two characters of most files containing scripts or interpreted programs. The “shebang” tells the system to use whatever follows to run the file — that the file is a Perl, or Python, or Ruby, or other program. “Shebang” also means “the entire universe of things that is under consideration,” as in “the whole shebang.” The book is a contribution to conceptual writing, published by a small press, most known to readers by word of mouth or via independent bookstores. It is an essentially subversive offering; having no words, letters, or even numbers in the title is, thus, appropriate.

    (Source: Nick Montfort at http://http://nomnym.com/successes.html)

    Alvaro Seica - 02.02.2015 - 16:28

  3. Scriptpoemas

    Scriptpoemas (2005-) is a collection of poems or “poemas” which is still being written by Antero de Alda. He was described by Rui Torres as an explorer of “new paths for computer-animated poetry” (Torres, 2008). These short and (apparently) ready-to-consume poems were created using Flash, Javascript and ActionScript and they often enact the activity or attribute described in their title. Each poem seems to convey the literal meaning of the words used to describe them: the “poem in prison” is presented behind bars, the “spherical poem” can be described as a round object. However, as soon as the poems are activated by the reader, new details begin to surface. Antero de Alda makes use of the digital environment to uncover the many faces of a poem and the evasiveness of language. The arbitrariness of signs is, after all, widely explored by Alda in each poem. Nothing is what it seems and icons, concepts or famous photographs are defamiliarized and turned into traps designed to betray the reader’s senses.

    Daniela Côrtes Maduro - 06.02.2015 - 23:57

  4. as valas abertas ++ des fossés ouverts ++ open ditches

    as valas abertas is a 40-line/80-characters poem, which stems from Borges's "The Library of Babel" (1941), and has been written as a challenge to an ongoing multilingual collaborative project with Claire Donato & Luc Dall'Armellina.

    (Source: Author's Webpage)

    Alvaro Seica - 10.02.2015 - 19:41

  5. Two Roads Diverged

    "Two Roads Diverged" is a story of family loss and its aftermath. Using Robert Frost's famous poem "The Road Not Taken" as its metaphorical model, this interactive narrative offers brief glimpses into the paths three children take after the accidental death of their parents. The narrative also offers a view--through archetypal imagery and remote voices--of the darker side of the family's tragic past.

    (Source: Author's Description)

    Alvaro Seica - 16.04.2015 - 11:15

  6. Collocations

    Collocations is a work of experimental writing that explores the philosophical implications of quantum mechanics by appropriating and transforming two key texts from Niels Bohr and Albert Einstein’s historic debates about the complementary relationship between position and momentum. By interacting with Collocations, the user turns into an experimenter, observing and physically manipulating the device to materialize unique textual configurations that emerge from within Bohr and Einstein’s original writings. Striking a balance between predetermined and algorithmically influenced texts, Collocations constructs a new quantum poetics, disrupting classical notions of textuality and offering new possibilities for reading. (Source: ELO 2015 catalog)

    Hannah Ackermans - 03.09.2015 - 09:54

  7. A Nervous System

    This is an interactive poem-fiction hybrid exploring unexplored taxonomies through a touch focused 3-D depth experimental interface. To understand, to translate the world, the objects and creatures and geographies around us, into meaningful (meaningless?) symbols, shareable concepts, we developed language. Then to further understand the differences and similarities of everything around us, to narrow down and dissect function and association, we created labels, categories and systems of taxonomy. And while these developed taxonomies and hierarchies are useful to organizing and departmentalizing our complex land/city/culture/art/literary-scapes, they can also hinder new possibilities and understandings. What if defining the function of the lung or leaves limits alternative and possibly powerful uses, keeps us from exploring what some might call “fringe” science? A Nervous System explores these alternative understandings of biological organisms, systems and organs.

    Hannah Ackermans - 05.09.2015 - 11:19

  8. Jason Nelson Digital Magic Show and Poetic Interfaces

    It is overly simplistic to state that my digital poems come entirely from building/discovering interfaces. Any artist’s creative practice is a merging/melding mix of fluid events and inspirations. But with all my digital poems there is one commonality, the emphasis on interface. Rarely do I even reuse interfaces, and when I do it is only as one section of a larger work. This continual drive to create new ways to rethink the structure, organization and interactive functionality of my digital poems comes from a variety of internal influences. Most importantly is how these interfaces are not just vessels for content, they are poems in themselves. In the same way digital poetry might be best defined by the experience, rather than a description. Or similar to a digital poet and their works being described by the events and stories surrounding the creation and building process, an interface is the life, the body, and a poetic construction in itself. And through the artist performance I will explore/perform numerous of my interfaces, discussing/reading from them, eluding to how they were made, their inspirations and my thoughts on how they could be reused by other poets.

    Hannah Ackermans - 30.11.2015 - 08:35

  9. Zenon Fajfer’s EYELIDS_Book of Emanations

    Powieki (eng. “eyelids”, also a pun on “forever”) is one of the crucial examples of Polish electronic poetry, authored by Zenon Fajfer, a contemporary Polish avant-garde poet, and creator of liberature, a literary genre integrating text and the material shape of the book (http://techsty.art.pl/powieki/). His volume of poetry is both in the form of the printed book and the accompanying CD included at the end of the volume; its on-line version premiered a year later (Szczecin: Forma, 2013). Fajfer introduced into poetry an original, interactive form called “the emanational poem,” in which he creates invisible, simultaneously coexisting dimensions of text that can be actualized in their kinetic (electronic) versions. Powieki is a multimodal cycle of such emanational poems. This textual labyrinth can be entered through different entrances and explored upwards, downwards, left and right to discover passages and openings unavailable in its printed form.

    Hannah Ackermans - 30.11.2015 - 09:00

  10. Monoclonal Microphone: The Movie

    A looping video (c. 20 mins – time could be adjusted) that both explores the world of “Monoclonal Microphone” and also reveals certain processes from its open-ended manufacture/generation. The video zooms in and out of a large field of generated poems; shows the underlying program running (generating verses and searching for them with internet search); and provides some expository captioning for the project. More information can be found at http://programmatology.shadoof.net/index.php?p=works/monoclonal/monoclon... (Source: ELO 2015 Conference Catalog)

    Hannah Ackermans - 30.11.2015 - 10:08

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