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  1. Remediating the Social (E-Book)

    This is the conference proceedings for Remediating the Social, the final conference of the ELMCIP project, held at the Edinburgh College of Art on November 1-3, 2012. Download the PDF from the links at the bottom of this entry.

    Elisabeth Nesheim - 10.08.2012 - 13:25

  2. Bootstrapping Electronic Literature: An Introduction to the ELMCIP Project

    Developing a Network-Based Creative Community: Electronic Literature as a Model of Creativity and Innovation in Practice (ELMCIP) is a three-year (June 2010-June 2013) collaborative research project funded by HERA, the Humanities in the European Research Area framework, sponsored by EU FP7 and the national research councils of the countries participating in the framework. The project has involved researchers from seven institutions in six European nations, who together have produced seven events including seminars, workshops and the Remediating the Social conference and exhibition, documented by this volume, Remediating the Social.

    Elisabeth Nesheim - 27.08.2012 - 12:11

  3. Electronic Literature Communities, Part I

    Editorial to the first special issue on Electronic Literature Communities, in Dichtung Digital 41. 

    Patricia Tomaszek - 07.12.2012 - 12:00

  4. Developing a Network-Based Creative Community: Electronic Literature as Model of Creativity and Innovation in Practice (ELMCIP)

    This talk for the Archive & Innovate conference will present to the ELO community a new major research project and research network focused on electronic literature in Europe. ELMCIP is a 3-year collaborative research project that will run from Spring 2010-2013 and funded under the Humanities in the European Research Area (HERA) theme: 'Humanities as a Source of Creativity and Innovation.' ELMCIP involves seven European research partners (University of Bergen, Edinburgh College of Art, Blekinge Technical Institute, Univeristy College Falmouth, University of Jyväskylä, University of Amsterdam, and University of Ljubjlana) and one non-academic partner (New Media Scotland) who will investigate how creative communities of practitioners form within a transnational and transcultural context in a globalized and distributed communication environment.
    The research goals of the project are to:
    • Understand how creative communities form and interact through distributed media
    • Document and evaluate various models and forces of creative communities in the field of electronic literature

    Audun Andreassen - 10.04.2013 - 11:29

  5. Digital Literary Arts, Pedagogy and the Issue of Disciplinarity

    An important aspect of the European research project on electronic literature, creativity and innovation, the ELMCIP project, is the issue of pedagogical endeavors in the field of digital literary arts. As the Principal Investigator of the Swedish partner in ELMCIP, I researched some pedagogical models in Europe and co-edited an anthology of European electronic literature, which included pedagogical resources. Based in my own experience from curricular development at Blekinge Institute of Technology in Sweden and the research in the ELMCIP project, I will discuss the issue of disciplinary contexts in teaching digital literary arts. In what schools, departments and programs is digital literature taught, and how does it affect the models of teaching? How does the model of digital literature challenge the university structures, and how disciplines are defined? What are some of the lessons learned from the ELMCIP project that can be brought to bear on how humanistic and arts programs are developed in the future?

    Maria Engberg - 21.06.2013 - 16:18

  6. Digital Humanities in Practice: Project Work on Developing a Scholarly Database of Electronic Literature (DIKULT 207, Autumn 2013)

    Digital Humanities in Practice: Project Work on Developing a Scholarly Database of Electronic Literature (DIKULT 207, Autumn 2013)

    Elisabeth Nesheim - 23.08.2013 - 11:50

  7. Digital Humanties in Praxis: Introducing the Brazilian Electronic Reseach Collection

    The Digital Humanities are in. The trendy scholarly practice for the tech-savvy literati, the DH has generated manifestos, grievances, enthusiasm, grammatical controversy (plural or singular concord?), and conferences. Said to possess both a “dark side” and a utopian core, it is humanities plus media. Humanities in media – but have the humanities ever existed outside a medium of inscription?

    Stig Andreassen - 26.09.2013 - 12:45

  8. Electronic Literature and Online Literary Databases: The PO.EX and ELMCIP Cases

    This essay reflects on the shift of user interaction operated by online literary archives and databases. One can easily recognize a change of scenery happening in the current networked world, given the way authors and general public produce, catalog, tag, access, research, analyze, preserve and share knowledge.
    In the field of electronic literature, the creation of several collaborative and open access databases attests this trend. For this purpose, I review two of them: the PO.EX Digital Archive of Portuguese Experimental Literature and the ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base. My aim is to contribute to an informed view on how these online literary databases are shaped and are shaping the field: What is their scope? How do they operate? What kind of navigation and user input exists? Why should they really matter?
    Finally, I use these insights to develop some considerations concerning the relations between memory and archive, and different perspectives on electronic literature preservation.

    (Source: Author's Abstract)

    Alvaro Seica - 14.05.2014 - 14:29

  9. Respuesta de lectoras de literatura electrónica española

    En el seminario de literatura electrónica en lengua española del 22 de abril de 2014, Maya Zalbidea Paniagua, utilizando la metodología de la respuesta del lector invitó a las asistentes a redactar una crítica de las obras que había explicado y mostrado ella previamente en el aula. Las asistentes debían interpretar la simbología de las obras.

    Maya Zalbidea - 18.05.2014 - 17:42

  10. A Beam of Light: Reading the Portuguese Electronic Literature Collection

    This intervention presents an analysis of the Portuguese Electronic Literature Collection (PELC) I have been curating since August 2013 in the ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base. By aggregating and expanding existing records in the database and creating new ones, I have been developing a research collection that addresses the Portuguese creative and theoretical production since the 1960s in the broader field of electronic literature. The PELC uses resources from ELMCIP and PO.EX, the Digital Archive of Portuguese Experimental Literature, led by Rui Torres at the Fernando Pessoa University.

    Scott Rettberg - 19.06.2014 - 20:47

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