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  1. International Conference on Narrative 2011

    International Conference on Narrative 2011

    Maria Engberg - 28.03.2011 - 14:17

  2. alire

    Philippe Bootz met the poet Tibor Papp in 1988; from this meeting came the idea to create an electronic review on floppy disks, and to group together authors working on electronic text. The L.A.I.R.E. collective (Lecture Art Innovation Recherche Ecriture) was created in October, 1988. It included, besides Philippe Bootz and Tibor Papp, Claude Maillard, Frédéric Develay and Jean-Marie Dutey, poets who were experimenting with the digital medium.

    Its first action was the effective realization of the alire review. The very first issue (0.1) was created for the inauguration of the review in the Pompidou Center in 1989. This number is an object which contains programmed poems on diskettes, printed works on paper and a work of sound poetry on a video cassette. It was with the n°1 issue (March 1989) that the specificity of the review became clearer: diskettes came with a notebook which contained only theoretical thoughts (there was no more video cassette nor printed work). This was the first clear assertion in France that digital literature existed and that its only medium was the computer.

    Philippe Bootz - 28.03.2011 - 15:55

  3. Nokturno

    Nokturno

    Mark Marino - 28.03.2011 - 15:59

  4. Futures of Digital Studies 2010

    The conference focused on the dialogue between forms of digital literacy connected with recent technological developments in networked and programmable media in relation to human expression and forms of representation. We seek to put in conversation digital artists and digital critics in order to examine the "state of the art" of digitally mediated practices and to envision possible futures for the current overlapping platforms, software, formats, hardware and artistic processes through which we experience digital culture. The two-day conference's thematic focus on the 'literary' in the digital age was integrated with a fundamental attention to visual art, music and sound, computer science, and other aspects of digital culture through an art exhibit and a concluding roundtable videoconference session with an international group of participants.

    Maria Engberg - 28.03.2011 - 16:05

  5. Cordite Poetry Review

    Established in 1997 and online since 2001, Cordite Poetry Review is a journal of Australian poetry and poetics. Published three times each year, Cordite presents contemporary and experimental works by Australian and international poets. The journal's archives, featuring over one thousand individual poems as well as growing collections of book reviews, feature articles, interviews and audio works, are all freely accessible online, and have also been indexed by the National Library of Australia. Cordite receives funding from the Literature Board of the Australia Council for the Arts.

    David Prater - 28.03.2011 - 16:10

  6. &NOW 2004: Festival of Writing as a Contemporary Conceptual Art

    &NOW 2004: Festival of Writing as a Contemporary Conceptual Art

    Mark Marino - 28.03.2011 - 16:19

  7. Fuselit

    Small cult magazine (Fuselit) and publisher (Sidekick) release occaision e-poetry online and also on CD with each issue of the print magazine Fuselit. Watched over by the elusive and dominating Dr Fulminare.http://drfulminare.com/fridgeblurb.html

    Nia Davies - 28.03.2011 - 16:28

  8. Narr@tive: Digital Storytelling

    Narr@tive: Digital Storytelling

    Mark Marino - 28.03.2011 - 16:28

  9. Electronic Literature Organization 2007 Symposium: The Future of Electronic Literature

    The Electronic Literature Organization’s Future of Electronic Literature Symposium at MITH at the University of Maryland, College Park was an event that brought e-lit writers, scholars, and an interested public together for an open mouse/open mic, a daylong symposium, and an ELO board meeting. Highlights included Katherine Hayle’s keynote (nicely summarized at jilltxt), considering the idea of “literary” vs. “literature” and providing very intelligent close readings of a variety of works of electronic literature, readings from new works by Stephanie Strickland, Rob Kendall, Nick Montfort, Deena Larsen, and others, as well as three very good panel discussions. The process-intensive panel looked at the idea of process from several different angles ranging from process-intensive collaboration, to natural language interface processing, to story generation.

    Mark Marino - 28.03.2011 - 16:32

  10. Netzliteratur.net

    Netzliteratur.net is an archive of important netliterature works and theoretical texts in German. Founded 2002 by Johannes Auer. It is a major source for the academic community as well as anyone interested in the matter.

    "In Germany the most important and impressive net literature portal ..."
    (Markku Eskelinen & Giovanna Di Rosario: Electronic Literature Publishing and Distribution in Europe)

    Beat Suter - 28.03.2011 - 16:33

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