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  1. Biopoetry

    Since the 1980s poetry has effectively moved away from the printed page. From the early days of the minitel to the personal computer as a writing and reading environment, we have witnessed the development of new poetic languages. Video, holography, programming and the web have further expanded the possibilities and the reach of this new poetry. Now, in a world of clones, chimeras, and transgenic creatures, it is time to consider new directions for poetry in vivo. In this article I propose the use of biotechnology and living organisms in poetry as a new realm of verbal, paraverbal and nonverbal.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 12.01.2011 - 17:25

  2. Against Digital Poetics

    Against Digital Poetics

    Patricia Tomaszek - 04.03.2011 - 23:07

  3. The Four Corners of the E-lit world. Textual Instruments, Operational Logics, Wetware Studies and Cybertext Poetics

    The Four Corners of the E-lit world. Textual Instruments, Operational Logics, Wetware Studies and Cybertext Poetics

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 30.08.2011 - 12:45

  4. Poetry Confronting Digital Media

    Poetry Confronting Digital Media

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 30.08.2011 - 12:52

  5. Primal Affective Ground and Digital Poetry

    Since the first symbolic scripts emerged, language has always been visual. My own work explores how language's visual can be read both as art and as poetry; how affect is amplified by sound; how generative and combinatorial layouts of text-video-sound open art from linear readings into infinite variations perspectives.
    For ELO, I am interested in creating an artist talk that utilizes content derived from two essays on digital poetry written for my comprehensive exams in the summer of 2009. The original essays are entitled: "Affecting Language: interdisciplinary explorations of emotion (new media, neuroscience, phenomenology and poetry)" and "Defining Creative Conduits: mediations on writing in digital media". Since both essays (as take-home exams) were each written over a brief 72 hour span, I look fwd to the opportunity of synthesizing and refining their argument into a presentation format.
    (Source: Author proposal)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 20.03.2012 - 12:42

  6. 'The frame of the sparkling graphics': the window and the screen in contemporary Irish poetry

    This conference paper discusses the visual tropes of the window and the screen in the work of Derek Mahon and Alan Gillis. More specifically, the focus is on how the architectural window and the digital screen operate as framing devices in their works, and how they enable the poets to interrogate the interrelationship between poetry as verbal discourse, and visual representation. The shift from the architectural window to a digital window on the screen also marks a shift in understanding questions of viewpoint and perspective in contemporary culture.

    Anne Karhio - 05.03.2015 - 18:01