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  1. Transdução: Processos de Transferência na Literatura e Arte Digitais

    Electronic Literature and Digital Art share many processes, themes, creative and theoretical guidelines. In this sense, I developed a critical framework that could resist to a hyperdisciplinary analysis and include one of the characteristics of this sharing pattern: the transfer and transformation processes. In order to recognize these processes I have done an approach of the transduction concept that could perform a theoretical migration on these aspects: the transducer function. Thus, the transducer function appears in the critical analysis of the works by Mark Z. Danielewski, Stuart Moulthrop, R. Luke DuBois and André Sier. The selected works are representative of the following genres: novel, hyperfiction, net.art and digital installation, drawing on phenomena and concerns resulting from the creative production within the digital culture. In this research I have enhanced mechanisms, patterns, languages and common grounds: authorship, user, cybertext, surface, hypertext, infoduct, interactivity, pixel, algorithm, code, programming, network, software and data. (Source: Author's abstract)

    Alvaro Seica - 15.08.2013 - 15:59

  2. The Computational Sublime in Nick Montfort's ‘Round’ and ‘All the Names of God’

    What if the post-literary also meant that which operates in a literary space (almost) devoid of
    language as we know it: for instance, a space in which language simply frames the literary or
    poetic rather than ‘containing’ it? What if the countertextual also meant the (en)countering of
    literary text with non-textual elements, such as mathematical concepts, or with texts that we
    would not normally think of as literary, such as computer code? This article addresses these
    issues in relation to Nick Montfort’s #!, a 2014 print collection of poems that presents readers with the output of computer programs as well as the programs themselves, which are designed to operate on principles of text generation regulated by specific constraints. More specifically, it focuses on two works in the collection, ‘Round’ and ‘All the Names of God’, which are read in relation to the notions of the ‘computational sublime’ and the ‘event’.

    (Source: Author's Abstract)

    Mario Aquilina - 13.01.2016 - 10:57