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  1. tantascoisasparadizer

    O poema tantascoisasparadizer é uma recodificação electrónica do poema visual com o mesmo título, aqui com supressão dos espaços que antes separavam as palavras que lhe dão o nome. A ideia era replicar em meio digital a poética interior ao texto que está na sua génese, o que considero ter sido conseguido. Isto, julgo, vem colocar em evidência o facto de o texto experimental partilhar, de certa forma, das premissas que estão na base da criação assistida por computador. No fundo, e sem ir muito longe nesta reflexão, é como se o poema visual tantas coisas para dizer fosse uma cristalização no espaço-tempo do poema electrónico tantascoisasparadizer. Mas, se virmos as coisas por outro lado, o poema visual não continha já em si uma ideia de movimento? Não estava, também ele, focado no processo? Não era já a sua natureza uma natureza performativa? Este poema foi construído com recurso ao software Processing e parti do código Text – Pulse, escrito por Bruno Richter e por ele partilhado em código aberto. Em larga medida, é a estas linhas de código que devo a existência visual e processual do meu poema.

    Alvaro Seica - 24.09.2014 - 10:30

  2. Computer Poetry ZX81

    Computer Poetry ZX81

    Silvestre Pestana - 05.10.2014 - 14:27

  3. Entrevista a Rui Torres

    Rui Torres is Associate Professor at University Fernando Pessoa (UFP) in Porto and also author of several works of digital poetry. In this interview he explains how he started working in this field and where his inspiration comes from. Furthermore he explains why he sees the works of electronic literature as literary experiments and his concept of aesthetics taking in account his privilege for multimedia and the active participation of the readers in the creation of some his works. In the end he makes some considerations about preservation and archiving of works of electronic literature.

    Daniele Giampà - 12.11.2014 - 19:44

  4. Beyond Codexspace: Potentialities of Literary Cybertext

    First written and published in 1996, the unrevised form of this essay now comes across, in
    certain respects, as ancient history – a function of the notorious acceleration of cultural and
    media development since the explosive growth of the Web after 1994. And yet, it chiefly
    describes a productive engagement with writing in programmable and, latterly, networked
    media which dates back, in my own case, to the late 1970s, an all-too-human, rather than
    silicon-enhanced, historical context.

    (Source: Author's Introduction)

    Alvaro Seica - 04.02.2015 - 17:50

  5. Bridle Your Tongue

    Poetry, and the imagery found therein, has long been one of the foundations of literature across the globe. Our ability to decipher the imagery and symbols in poetic verse has long been a daunting and rewarding task for those individuals who enjoy reading and hearing verse. Bridle Your Tongue is an animated poem with a concentration on the power and longevity of destructive language. (Source: ELO Conference 2014)

    Thor Baukhol Madsen - 12.02.2015 - 14:08

  6. GAMES, PO, ART, PLAY, & ARTEROIDS 2.03

    One of several essays Jim Andrews wrote to accompany his shoot-em-up poetry game Arteroids.

    Jim Andrews - 09.03.2015 - 01:29

  7. 'Roda Lume' by E. M. de Melo e Castro

    Roda Lume is a 2’ 43’’ videopoem, which was broadcast by the Rádio Televisão Portuguesa (RTP) in 1969 and subsequently destroyed by the station itself, and was reenacted by Melo e Castro from the original storyboard in 1986. The work is indeed surprising, as a poem that overlaps text, kinetic text, image, moving image and sound, anticipating and influencing various genres of digital hypermedia poetry mainly launched after the birth of the World Wide Web. It constructs a different notion of space-time, opening a “visual time” (Melo e Castro 1993: 238) of unfolding images and text that comprises a new reading perception.

    (Source: Author's text)

    Alvaro Seica - 07.04.2015 - 17:00

  8. Starryveldt

    Starryveldt

    Alvaro Seica - 22.04.2015 - 14:49

  9. Ninho de Metralhadoras

    Published as servilivres, Musa Speculatrix series, published in “Qorpo Estranho” Brazilian magazine nº 2, 1976

    Alvaro Seica - 29.04.2015 - 11:54

  10. Grain: A Prairie Poem

    An animated gif poem which visually plays with the letter "g."

    Alvaro Seica - 09.05.2015 - 13:13

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