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  1. Das Epos der Maschine

    This work uses pictures and sound to make it more interesting. It looks and sounds creepy. The focus of the story is the interaction between man and machine. 

    Scott Rettberg - 16.06.2012 - 21:47

  2. [the perpetual bed]

    [the perpetual bed] is an online, virtual VRML world in which users can interact with each other from within a navigable, surrealistic narrative. A hybrid between video, interactive art, installation, and animation, the piece is based on my own and my grandmother's experiences within transparent yet tangible beings and places discovered when hospitalized. My creative concerns in creating this piece are numerous, but I am trying to create a new media from the temporal and motion imaging elements of film and video, the accessibility of the internet, the user-centered narrative form from interactive art, and elements of choreography. The interaction will take place through a technology I have designed called Navigable Chat. Users can percieve each other through their textual presence. My goal is to tell a story in an altogether new way -- that of allowing the user to move through a story, to "happen" upon a scene, and to find their own meaning in this ever-enacted place. Users can then leave their mark and become part of the story--leave hints, impressions, etc--for the next viewer.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 15.10.2012 - 14:55

  3. Lair of the Marrow Monkey

    Lair of the Marrow Monkey

    Scott Rettberg - 18.10.2012 - 15:25

  4. El Dorado: Scenes from the Road

    El Dorado: Scenes from the Road

    Scott Rettberg - 20.10.2012 - 16:10

  5. Bread.Crumbs

    "The (scratch) novel CRACKED EGGS AND WASTED TIME is very (very) loosely based in simultaneous (mis)readings of D. H. Lawrence's WOMEN IN LOVE and THE EGYPTIAN BOOK OF THE DEAD, commingled with other additional nonsense..." From the introductory page.

    Sissel Hegvik - 23.01.2013 - 20:34

  6. Photopia

    Noted for removing the puzzle-centric focus of most interactive fiction and emphasising story instead.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 29.06.2013 - 09:28

  7. (a grammar of signs has replaced a botany of symptoms)

    The title, (a grammar of signs has replaced a botany of symptoms), comes from Michel Foucault's The Birth of the Clinic, in which he charts a shift in the language surrounding the perception and description of the human body which occurred along with the advent of modern medicine. Hidden beneath layers of highly magnified and slowly animated images of plant cells are small narrative texts which, when clicked upon, reveal botanical observations of colour from the perception of a child. These textual offerings must be actively sought out - with no user interaction they will never be revealed. Upon clicking, no sooner are the texts exposed, then they are covered up again. This continuous process of regeneration illustrates paradox of the elusiveness of any grammar in the face of a relentless botany.

    J. R. Carpenter - 28.09.2013 - 14:33