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  1. p2p: Polish-Portuguese E-Lit

    The p2p exhibition brings to public different digital literary works produced by Polish and Portuguese authors in the past four decades. Polish and Portuguese literary, artistic, social, political, and even religious contexts are quite similar, even if geographically distant, and still quite divergent. It has been a fascinating surprise to find evidence of several common threads in works of experimental and generative literature, Spectrum-based animated poetry/Demoscene, and ActionScript-based digital poetry and fiction.

    The exhibition will therefore be constructed around three nuclei: experimentalism, activism and animation. For this purpose, the p2p exhibition proposes to present, face-to-face, works by authors such as Pedro Barbosa, Silvestre Pestana, E. M. de Melo e Castro, Rui Torres, André Sier, Manuel Portela, Luís Lucas Pereira, Józef Żuk Piwkowski, Marek Pampuch, Michał Rudolf, Kaz, Piotr Puldzian Płucienniczak, Leszek Onak and Andrzej Głowacki.

    A part of the ELO 2015 exhibition “Decentering: Global Electronic Literature” at 3,14 gallery in Bergen, Norway (August 4-23, 2015).

    (Source: Álvaro Seiça and Piotr Marecki)

    Alvaro Seica - 04.09.2015 - 22:29

  2. Electronic Literature Collection, Volume Three

    In the golden age of electronic books (or e-books), the phones, pads, tablets, and screens with which we read have become ubiquitous. In hand around the house or emerging from pockets on trains and planes, propped up on tables at restaurants or on desks alongside work computers, electronic books always seem to be within arms reach in public and private spaces alike. As their name suggests, however, the most prevalent e-books often attempt to remediate the print codex. Rather than explore the affordances and constraints of computational processes, multimodal interfaces, network access, global positioning, or augmented reality, electronic books instead attempt to simulate longstanding assumptions about reading and writing. Nevertheless, the form and content of literature are continually expanding through those experimental practices digital-born writing and electronic literature. Electronic literature (or e-lit) occurs at the intersection between technology and textuality.

    Alvaro Seica - 19.02.2016 - 00:33

  3. End(s) of Electronic Literature Festival Exhibition Kiosk

    End(s) of Electronic Literature Festival Exhibition Kiosk

    Anders Gaard - 22.09.2016 - 14:59

  4. The Progressive Dinner Party

    The Progressive Dinner Party

    Alvaro Seica - 11.05.2017 - 11:42

  5. Between Play and Politics: Dysfunctionality in Digital Art

    Marie-Laure Ryan argues that dysfunctionality in new media art is “not limited to play with inherently digital phenomena such as code and programs,” and provides a number of alternative art examples, while also arguing that dysfunctionality “could [also] promote a better understanding of the cognitive activity of reading, or of the significance of the book as a support of writing.”

    tye042 - 20.09.2017 - 12:32

  6. Approaches to Interactive Text and Recombinant Poetics

    A series of images from "approaches to interactive text and recombinant poetics".

    Andre Lund - 22.09.2017 - 17:57

  7. The Sounds of the Artificial Intelligentsia

    As I thread my way through ebr, I touch base with the artificial intelligentsia that my work circulates in. The artificial intelligentsia is an internetworked intelligence that consists of all the linked data being distributed in cyberspace at any given time, one that is powered by artistic- intellectual agents remixing the flow of contemporary thought.

    tye042 - 25.09.2017 - 15:13

  8. bpNichol’s ‘First Screening’ - Introduction

    bpNichol’s ‘First Screening’ - Introduction

    Ana Castello - 16.10.2018 - 17:00

  9. Mail Art and Ephemera

    Mail Art and Ephemera

    Ana Castello - 28.10.2018 - 13:53

  10. Ciberia: Biblioteca de Literatura Digital en Español

    Ciberia: Biblioteca de Literatura digital en Español, a collection of electronic literature works in Spanish created by the LEETHI group (European Literatures from Text to Hypermedia), using OdA 2.0., a learning objects’ repository built by ILSA research team at the Computing Sciences Faculty of the University Complutense of Madrid. Ciberia library emerges from the need to make digital literature in Spanish more visible, report its development, and leave a trail that would compensate for its ephemeral quality. This collection is part of the research carried out by two research groups in Spain: ILSA, which has developed the software, and LEETHI. This library now works as the nucleus of derivate projects that includes a publisher focused on electronic literature creation and on electronic and ciberculture theories and is part of Cell Consortium project.

    Laura Sánchez Gómez - 11.06.2019 - 13:20

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