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  1. PhoneMe: A mobile phone-native genre of poetry for the social media age

    This presentation regards to development of a place-based, geotagged, online mapping of an innovative, mobile phone-native, spoken word genre of poetry. The website www.phonemeproject.com hosts poems that are left as messages by calling 1-604-PHONEME (746-6363) and leaving your name, location of the call or topical location of the poem, title of the poem, and then recording a poem of up to four minutes in length. The poem is pinned on an interactive map that features a google street view image of the location, the MP3 audio file, and in some cases the text of the poem. Longer poems can serialized. The intent of this project is to give voice to community-based writing about real places and spaces within the community. As such, it began with a year of workshops conducted in the downtown east side of Vancouver, one of the poorest neighbourhoods in North America, in order that poets in the community to speak back to media representations of their neighbourhood. We have moved on to working with schools, providing workshops for hundreds of students in British Columbia, Canada.

    Jana Jankovska - 05.09.2018 - 15:28

  2. Marjorie Luesebrink

    Marjorie Luesebrink

    Li Yi - 26.09.2018 - 14:59

  3. It Must Have Been Dark By Then

    It Must Have Been Dark By Then' is a book and audio experience that uses a mixture of evocative music, narration and field recording to bring you stories of changing environments, from the swamplands of Louisiana, to empty Latvian villages and the edge of the Tunisian Sahara. Unlike many audio guides, there is no preset route, the software builds a unique map for each person’s experience. It is up to you to choose your own path through the city, connecting the remote to the immediate, the precious to the disappearing. 

    Source: https://sites.grenadine.uqam.ca/sites/nt2/en/elo2018/schedule/1465/It+Mu...

    Amirah Mahomed - 26.09.2018 - 15:11

  4. The Fall

    The interactive project presented at the new media prize of 2015. 

     

     

    Nina Kolovic - 01.11.2018 - 13:21

  5. Wendy Hui Kyong Chun

    Wendy Hui Kyong Chun is Simon Fraser University's Canada 150 Research Chair in New Media in the School of Communication. She has studied both Systems Design Engineering and English Literature, which she combines and mutates in her current work on digital media. [..] She has been Professor and Chair of the Department of Modern Culture and Media at Brown University, where she worked for almost two decades and where she’s currently a Visiting Professor. She has also been a Visiting Scholar at the Annenberg School at the University of Pennsylvania, Member of the Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton), and she has held fellowships from: the Guggenheim, ACLS, American Academy of Berlin, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard. She has been a Visiting Professor at AI Now at NYU, the Velux Visiting Professor of Management, Politics and Philosophy at the Copenhagen Business School; the Wayne Morse Chair for Law and Politics at the University of Oregon, Visiting Professor at Leuphana University (Luneburg, Germany), and a Visiting Associate Professor in the History of Science Department at Harvard, of which she is an Associate.

    (from university profile)

    Gesa Blume - 27.08.2019 - 00:15

  6. From the cafè to tweet: digital Literature as global literature. Positioning of digital literature in Spanish.

    The life of man and his mental structure is the food for literary material. The vision of the world held by each group of humans, its cerebral conception of reality is what literature collates over the course of time. Society of the 21st Century is progressively changing its structures towards a global society brought about the enormous improvements in communications, particularly those related to the digital revolution. Taking this conception of literature as a baseline with respect to the world, these changes will be taken into account and affect literature in the digital era. One of the evolutions brought about by the hyper connectivity is globalization. It is possible to state that we are experiencing the birth of a global literature in the sense expressed by Damrosch and by Tabbi: it is a new way of getting closer to the world and communication that is growing without any spatial and time barriers and can reach any type of receiver. It is also possible to identify universal patterns that are repeated in the digital literature that converts it in global literature. The global virtual space itself is built on part of the collective imaginary of digital literature.

    Vian Rasheed - 12.11.2019 - 22:45

  7. StoryFace

    StoryFace

    Serge Bouchardon - 13.02.2020 - 10:55

  8. At, or To Take Regret: Some Reflections on Grammars

    At, or To Take Regret: Some Reflections on Grammars

    Johannah Rodgers - 29.05.2021 - 19:19

  9. Figurski at Findhorn on Acid 7.0

    Figurski at Findhorn on Acid 7.0

    Richard Snyder - 15.09.2021 - 20:32

  10. A Recombinant History of Australian Camels

    A Recombinant History of Australian Camels

    David Wright - 22.02.2023 - 12:25

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