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  1. Iterature

    Iterature

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 01.03.2011 - 11:48

  2. MIDIPoet

    In its current version (which was released in 2002), MIDIPoet consists of two applications: MIDIPoet Composer and MIDIPoet Player. As their names suggest, Composer contains a set of tools for creating MIDIPoet pieces, and Player performs them. The MIDIPoet environment has its own programming language, made up from relatively complex text commands. In order to make things easier (and allow other people to approach the tool with relatively little pain), MIDIPoet Composer offers a visual way of creating MIDIPoet pieces, so there is no need to write code. MIDIPoet itself was written in a combination of C++ and Visual Basic, and only runs under Windows.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 04.03.2011 - 23:13

  3. Google Earth: A Poem for Voice and Internet

    This highly professional video documents a live performance of this poem, which uses primarily three materials: speeches by presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, and Google Earth. These works are brought together in a political and economic mashup that incorporates texts read aloud by Portela in English and translated to Spanish and Portuguese, voice recordings of the speeches, and a large projected video of Google Earth navigating to parts of the world that resonate with the poem. Portela intervenes upon these materials in a variety of ways, defamiliarizing them towards the poetic, emphasizing particular words or passages by isolating and repeating them, and placing them in conversation with its other materials through juxtaposition and superposition. (Source: Leonardo Flores, I ♥ E-Poetry)

    Scott Rettberg - 20.05.2011 - 22:32

  4. An Evening with Electronic Literature Organization

    The Electronic Literature Organization (ELO) presents an evening of multimedia, interactive performative-readings highlighting a broad range of born-digital literary forms, including game-inspired, collaborative, database, film/video, generative, and kinetic image work. The evening's presentations showcase five projects selected from the second Electronic Literature Collection, published in February 2011, and created by Oni Buchanan, Jhave, Illya Szilak, Sandy Baldwin, and collaborators Stephanie Strickland and Cynthia Lawson Jaramillo, with videos by Paul Ryan.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 12.12.2011 - 20:13

  5. Brown E-Fest 2006: A Celebration of New Literary Hypermedia

    Presentations, performances, and readings at the Literary Arts Program (Brown University), featuring, among others, premieres by students from Brown´s electronic writing courses.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 01.02.2012 - 15:06

  6. The Nowhere Dance

    The Nowhere Dance is a performance that to place in Alan Sondheim's Second Life exhibition The Accidental Artist (http://elmcip.net/node/3375). It was performed by Alan Sondheim and Sandy Baldwin February 11th 2009.

    Elisabeth Nesheim - 03.02.2012 - 12:18

  7. The Accidental Artist

    The Accidental Artist was an ongoing exhibition in Second Life at Odyssey, June 2008 - January 2009, by Alan Sondheim, with help from Sugar Seville, Azure Carter, Gary Nanes, Sandy Baldwin, and Frances van Scoy at the Virtual Environments Laboratory, West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia. The show changed daily and the gave me an opportunity to study the phenomenology of a virtual world in relation to avatar-human objectivity. The following texts were written during the generation of the show.

    Elisabeth Nesheim - 03.02.2012 - 13:03

  8. Autostart: A Festival of Digital Literature

    Celebrating the release of the Electronic Literature Collection, volume 1 presented by the MACHINE reading series. Conversation about writing and literature in the digital age, featuring poets: Charles Bernstein, Jena Osman, Bob Perelman, Ron Silliman. Workshops, readings, and performances, along with an "Electronic Writing Slam": A time to collaboratively write and to informally discuss forms, techniques, and technologies.

    Source: Festival Website

    Patricia Tomaszek - 03.02.2012 - 14:17

  9. Битница: A Translation

    A homolexic translation of Evgeny Evtushenko's "Bohemian Girl."

    Joe Milutis - 12.02.2012 - 18:58

  10. Reading by Michelle Teran: Work-in-Progress Guest Lecture

    New media artist and researcher Michelle Teran will present work-in-progress on her Folgen project

    Folgen (2011), draws on the existing narratives of amateur video makers found on YouTube to build a multi-layered media landscape of Berlin.  My subjective approach combines fragments of images and sound from the videos with my own narration, using the traces video makers have left in the public sphere of the internet to follow people throughout the city. A large table, roughly shaped like the city of Berlin is covered with drawings, texts and documentation from videos. It emerges as a temporary tactile media archive and becomes a physical environment for the re-playing of personal histories, which are then performed live. The many protagonists involved in the making of the work create the stories told during the performance.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 12.03.2012 - 16:54

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