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  1. N. Katherine Hayles

    Katherine Hayles is Distinguished Professor of English and media studies at the University of California, Los Angeles. Her research interests concern topics related to literature and science in the 20th and 21st century; 20th and 21st century American fiction; electronic textuality, hypertext fiction and theory; science fiction; literary theory; and media theory. With degrees in both chemistry and English literature, Hayles is one of the foremost scholars of the relationship between literature and science in the late twentieth century. She is the author six books, including How We Became Posthuman: Virtual Bodies in Cybernetics, Literature and Informatics (1999), which won the Rene Wellek Prize for the Best Book in Literary Theory for 1998-1999; and Writing Machines (2001), which won the Suzanne Langer Award for Outstanding Scholarship. Her most recent book is Electronic Literature: New Horizons for the Literary (2007).

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 31.01.2011 - 12:55

  2. Christian Vandendorpe

    Christian Vandendorpe

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 24.03.2011 - 15:27

  3. Jacques Donguy

    poet, performer, essay writer, translator. Started his creative literary and artistic endeavour in the early 1970s. He took part in the movement French Beat Poetry and was among the ideologists of the poetic movement Nouveau Réalisme. He has published a great number of poetry works, making use of new technologies, and since the early 1980s he has been one of the theorists of the computer poetry genre. He is the author of a number of books dedicated to various trends in the contemporary literature.

    [Source: http://glukhomania.ncca-kaliningrad.ru/pr_sonorus.php3?lang=eng&t=1&p=26 ]

    Dan Kvilhaug - 08.04.2013 - 13:52

  4. Friedrich Kittler

    Friedrich Kittler

    Scott Rettberg - 29.06.2013 - 13:31