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  1. Word Circuits

    A showcase and resource for hypertext and cybertext poetry and fiction, established in 1997, and maintained by Robert Kendall.

    From the website: This is a watering hole for new media poetry and fiction--indigenously electronic work that couldn't be realized in print. Hypertext is the mainstay here, but we also deal in more exotic forms of cybertext, which exploit such innovations as text-generating algorithms or animated text that moves and mutates on the screen. Welcome to the world of hypertextual, interactive, self-generating, kinetic, and multimedia poetry and fiction.

    Find out What's New here.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 10.02.2011 - 14:44

  2. Poems That Go

    ABOUT POEMS THAT GO

    What makes a poem a poem? If a text is sung, does it become a song? When motion graphics are involved, does that make it animation? If the images are photographic, is it cinema?
    In the age of "Post-media aesthetics," as Lev Manovitch has pointed out, the blurring of traditional media genres makes it difficult, if not impossible, to rigidly define media territories. Instead of struggling to draw these separations, we freely let the arts mingle in a space we still dare to draw a circle around and label "poetry."

    Although we use the term "new media poetry" as a genre of "electronic literature" to describe the work included in Poems that Go, "literature" itself proves to be a pesky term. Indeed, we have been accused of devaluing the word at the expense of the image. Our goal here is not to elevate one art above the rest, but to seek an inclusive understanding of literature, one that goes beyond written text-based works, to include visual, aural and media literacy.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 11.02.2011 - 16:44

  3. DHQ Digital Humanities Quarterly

    DHQ Digital Humanities Quarterly

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 18.02.2011 - 15:39

  4. University of Notre Dame Press

    University of Notre Dame Press

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 18.02.2011 - 21:06

  5. Culture Machine

    from the publisher: Culture Machine is an international open-access journal of culture and theory, founded in 1999. Its aim is to be to cultural studies and cultural theory what 'fundamental research' is to the natural sciences: open-ended, non-goal orientated, exploratory and experimental. All contributions to the journal are peer-reviewed.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 22.02.2011 - 20:47

  6. Postmodern Culture

    Founded in 1990 as a groundbreaking experiment in scholarly publishing on the Internet, Postmodern Culture has become a leading electronic journal of interdisciplinary thought on contemporary culture. PMC offers a forum for commentary, criticism, and theory on subjects ranging from identity politics to the economics of information.   (Source: Journal homepage at Project MUSE.)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 11.03.2011 - 11:19

  7. Authoring Software

    A resource for teachers and students of new media writing, who are exploring what authoring tools to use, for new media writers and poets, who are interested in how their colleagues approach their work, and for readers, who want to understand how new media writers and poets create their work, the Authoring Software project is an ongoing collection of statements about authoring tools and software. It also looks at the relationship between interface and content in new media writing and at how the innovative use of authoring tools and the creation of new authoring tools have expanded digital writing/hypertext writing/net narrative practice.

    Judy Malloy - 11.03.2011 - 18:05

  8. Dear Navigator

    Inspired by print and online journals such as Cabinet, Chicago Review, Trickhouse, and Octopus, Dear Navigator desires to create a forum for innovative writing that works as art object, critical opus, interdisciplinary essay, poetic form, and more plaintively, communication to the world. No longer teaching the navigators how to do celestial navigation— From the mind of one to another, we continue to work with these directions: shared through the medium of a quarterly electronic journal, a blog which is updated a little more regularly, and aims that include engaging the open space of its electronic form as the maker sees fit, traditionally or less traditionally, as well as publishing a handful of established and up-and-coming writers per issue. The nature of waterways described by any given nautical publication changes regularly—

    (Source: Dear Navigator, Manifest page)

    Scott Rettberg - 16.03.2011 - 17:07

  9. OEI

    OEI

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 24.03.2011 - 16:21

  10. Digital Cultures Research Centre, University of the West of England, Bristol

    Digital Cultures Research Centre, University of the West of England, Bristol

    Scott Rettberg - 26.03.2011 - 11:58

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