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  1. Une “poésie numérique”? Khlebnikov et Jakobson, Marinetti, Schwitters, Kostelanetz

    Quelques protagonistes des avant-gardes historiques montrèrent de l’intérêt pour une poésie exclusivement faite de nombres.

    Rebecca Lundal - 17.10.2013 - 17:58

  2. Nynorsk i 140

    "Nynorsk i 140" is a Twitter competition. Poetry and short stories are submitted in form of Twitter's 140 characters, with hashtag #nynov

    Six rounds of competition with a chosen winner for each round. About 3000 entries in total, from about 500 writers.

    Deichmanske Library in Oslo is the project manager and have made this contest possible with funding from the organisation "Fritt Ord" and "Språkåret 2013".

    These are the different themes for each round, and number of contributions received:

    1 -Vår (spring, ours) (over 500 contributions)
    2 -Lyst (light, lust) (350 contributions)
    3 -Tre (tree, three) (over 500 contributions)
    4 -Bar (bar,naked) (over 600 contributions)
    5 -Frisk (fresh, healthy) (428 contributions)
    6 -Ende (end, butt) (570 contributions)

    These are the winners and their stories:

    Theresa Marie Sperre - 18.10.2013 - 11:29

  3. Poetry 4 U: Pinning poems under/over/through the streets

    This article explores how a new generation of smartphones, social software, GPS and other location-based technologies offer the ability to create new cultural spaces and publication models. These technologies allow us to digitally superimpose information on the physical world which, in turn, allows for the re-imagining of places and even identity. In this article a locative and social media art project is presented that engages with Melbourne’s status as the second UNESCO City of Literature. The project brings poetry into the street while, at the same time, occupying the floating worlds of social media. By pinning community-generated poetry to site-specific spaces on Google Maps, the article argues that a layer of narrative can be added to the readers’ perceptions of their immediate surroundings when viewing the site-specific poems through their mobile phones. Finally, the article considers the implications of Web 2.0, smartphones and location-based technologies for creative writing and arts practices.

    Source: authors' abstract

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 18.11.2013 - 16:13

  4. Das Cantigas como Processos Combinatórios: Protótipo de um Trabalho de Geração Textual e Intertextual a Partir da Poesia dos Cancioneiros e de Releitura de Salette Tavares

    O objectivo deste trabalho, provisoriamente intitulado "Cantiga", é lançar as bases de um projecto que possa apresentar, comparar e agenciar, por via da intertexualidade e da participação, um diálogo entre cantigas medievais (a poesia do trovadorismo) e algumas releituras que delas foram feitas por poetas portugueses contemporâneos (no âmbito do experimentalismo literário português, neste caso, um poema de Salette Tavares). Trata-se portanto de um protótipo, mais do que um trabalho finalizado. Como em outros trabalhos de investigação criativa que tenho feito, pretendo aqui fazer uso das potencialidades do computador como máquina criativa, como gestor e manipulador de símbolos numéricos.

    (Source: Author's Abstract)

    Alvaro Seica - 28.11.2013 - 12:29

  5. “The Dead Must be Killed Once Again”: Plagiotropia as Critical Literary Practice

    Húmus by Herberto Helder (1967) is recognized for its direct quotation from Raul Brandão’s 1921 poem of the same name. However, Helder’s work is more than the simple intertextual suggestion of a text: it transforms it, putting into motion its latent power, reviving it. As may be read in the epigraph of this work, the "words, sentences, fragments, images" from Húmus are used by Helder in order to achieve, through re-writing, a full reading of the text by Brandão. Such reading multiplies and transforms the meanings that are crystalized in the work by Brandão, thus articulating the scope the poet refers: "freedoms, freedom."

    Alvaro Seica - 28.11.2013 - 15:04

  6. Poetry Connection: Link Up With Canadia Poetry

    Poetry Connection: Link Up With Canadia Poetry

    J. R. Carpenter - 21.02.2014 - 05:54

  7. Cybernetic Serendipity

    Collection of computer-generated texts based on an exhibition of cybernetic art curated by Jasia Reichardt, shown at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London in 1968.

    Scott Rettberg - 21.08.2014 - 11:39

  8. Failure, A Writer's Life

    Failure, A Writer’s Life is a catalogue of literary monstrosities. Its loosely organized vignettes and convolutes provide the intrepid reader with a philosophy for the unreadable, a consolation for the ignored, and a map for new literary worlds. "The unfinished, unreadable, unpublishable — the scribbled and illegible, the too slowly published, the countless unpublished, all that does not seem to count at all. . . . here lie all manner of ruins. From Marguerite Duras to Google Maps, Henri Bergson to H.P. Lovecraft, Orson Welles to Walter Benjamin to a host of literary ambulance drivers (not to mention the FBI, UFOs, and UbuWeb), _Failure, A Writer's Life_ charts empty spaces and occupied libraries, searches databases bereft of filters, files spam and porn and weather reports into their respective _konvoluts_, and realizes the full potential of cultural inscription. In a series of snapshots concatenated in the best surrealist mode, Milutis has curated a catalogue of curiosities as essential to understanding our current cultural condition as they are eccentric.

    Joe Milutis - 06.11.2014 - 10:23

  9. Beyond the Googlization of Literature: Writing Other Networks

    It's true, poets have been experimenting with producing writing (or simply writing, just writing of a sort not familiar to us - writing as input and writing as choosing) with the aid of digital computer algorithms since Max Bense and Theo Lutz first experimented with computer-generated writing in 1959. What is new and particular to the 21st century literary landscape is a revived interest in the underlying workings of algorithms, not just a concern with the surface-level effects and results that characterized much of the fascination in the 1970s and 1980s with computer-generated writing. With the ever-increasing power of algorithms, especially search engine algorithms that attempt not just to "know" us but to in fact anticipate and so shape our every desire, our passive acceptance of these algorithms necessarily means we cannot have any sense of the shape and scope of how they determine our access to information, let alone shape our sense of self which is increasingly driven by autocomplete, autocorrect, automata.

    Daniela Ørvik - 17.02.2015 - 15:47

  10. Teaching Creative Writing with Python

    The course concerns the classic tension in poetry between decontextualization and juxtaposition: deciding what a text’s constituent elements are, breaking the text into those elements, and then bringing them back together in surprising and interesting ways. Students are taught not just about string processing and text analysis, but also about the poetic possibilities of using those techniques to algorithmically build new texts. Each semester, the course culminates in a live performance, in which each student must read aloud for an audience a text that one of their programs has generated.

    (Source: Author's Abstract)

    Sumeya Hassan - 26.02.2015 - 21:16

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