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  1. The ELMCIP Knowledge Base

    The ELMCIP Knowledge Base

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 24.06.2011 - 12:39

  2. p0es1s: Ästhetik digitaler Poesie/The Aesthetics of Digital Poetry

    Digital poetry demonstrates and reflects the use of language and symbol systems in computers and digital networks. Digital poetry thus refers to creative, experimental, playful, and also critical language art involving programming, multimedia, animation, interactivity, and internet communication. This book discusses how the concepts of text and poetry and of reception and authorship have changed. Comprising essays, manifestos, and detailed analyses by scholars and artists, it is a handbook on the aesthetics of digital poetry, which presents the current state of the discourse.

     

    Source: Book jacket

    Jörgen Schäfer - 28.06.2011 - 16:17

  3. Archivability of Electronic Literature in Context

    Archivability of Electronic Literature in Context

    Jörgen Schäfer - 08.07.2011 - 10:50

  4. The Digital Poem against the Interface Free

    Recent e-literature by Judd Morrissey and Jason Nelson represents a broad movement in e-literature to draw attention to the move toward the so-called “interface free” – or, the interface that seeks to disappear altogether by becoming as “natural” as possible. It is against this troubling attempt to mask the workings of the interface and how it delimits creative production that Judd Morrissey creates “The Jew’s Daughter” – a work in which readers are invited to click on hyperlinks in the narrative text, links which do not lead anywhere so much as they unpredictably change some portion of the text. Likewise working against the clean and transparent interface of the Web, in “game, game, game and again game,” Jason Nelson’s hybrid poem-videogame self-consciously embraces a hand-drawn, hand-written interface while deliberately undoing videogame conventions through nonsensical mechanisms that ensure players never advance past level 121/2. As such, both Morrissey and Nelson intentionally incorporate interfaces that thwart readers’ access to the text so that they are forced to see how such interfaces are not natural so much as they define what and how we read and write.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 05.10.2011 - 09:09

  5. Exploiting Kairos in Electronic Literature: A Rhetorical Analysis

    The purpose of this study is to expand on Wayne Booth's work in the Rhetoic of Fiction regarding methods directing readers toward understanding in fiction to include the possibilities for pursuation avaiable in electronic mediums. The story theorizes the the answers to the following: How are writers in electronic spaces appropirating, expanding, and subverting electronic devices honed in print? How has the kairos, or situational context, of electronic spaces been exploited? What new rhetorical devices are being developed in electronic spaces? What does the dialogue between print-based and electronic-based works offers to rhetorical scholars in terms of rhetorical analysis and composition? 

    Kristina Gulvik Nilsen - 18.10.2011 - 21:28

  6. European eLiterature Collection

    The European eLiterature Collection is a project developed as part of The eLiterature Research Project. The aim of the collection is to provide an essential tool to assist in formalizing e-Literature in Europe.

    In this respect, the European eLiterature Collection Board of Editors, evaluates, reviews, and publishes on the web works of Electronic Literature by European authors.

    Fabio De Vivo - 22.10.2011 - 12:16

  7. Collecting digital literature in Europe

    Collecting digital literature in Europe

    J. R. Carpenter - 25.11.2011 - 14:10

  8. Invisible Rendezvous: Connection and Collaboration in the New Landscape of Electronic Writing

    Invisible Rendezvous: Connection and Collaboration in the New Landscape of Electronic Writing

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 15.01.2012 - 12:25

  9. Contrasts and Convergences of Electronic Literature

    [Insert author's abstract here.]

    Presented at the 2012 MLA Convention as part of the panel "730. New Media Narratives and Old Prose Fiction," arranged by the MLA's Division on Prose Fiction. 

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 17.01.2012 - 11:54

  10. Writing the Virtual: Eleven Dimensions of E-Poetry

    Eleven characteristics of networked digital poetry, a category that encompasses an enormous variety of work, are discussed and illustrated with examples. Issues raised include the recalibration of the writing/reading relationship, the nature of attachment at the site of interaction, an architectonic quality of instrument-building that characterizes many pieces, differing treatments of time and “place”, the use of recombinant flux, a performative character displayed by many works, the omnipresence of both translation and looping, as well as pervasive references to ruin and hybrid states of mixed reality.

    (Source: article abstract)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 06.02.2012 - 10:45

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