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  1. Heights

    Heights

    Scott Rettberg - 18.10.2012 - 11:34

  2. Calaboca

    Videoperformance, 52”

    Luciana Gattass - 23.11.2012 - 15:12

  3. eye in the making

    Eye in the Making consists of 3 clusters of texts.  The user interacts with image and text, expand the texts to develop readings.

    The user creates contexts and variations in readings depending on how much or little the texts are expanded, from where they are expanded, and the order in which the reader opens up the text.  This is furthered by a tension between the spatial arrangements and chronological expansion of the texts, along with the sounds accompanying the user's interaction with the text.

    Start by clicking on the moving image, and follow the texts, clicking certain words to produce more.  Click on the moving image once more to move on to the next section.

    Source: author's abstract

    Scott Rettberg - 07.01.2013 - 16:05

  4. Logozoa

    Lo·go·zo·a n [fr. Gk logos word + zoia animals] (2005) 1 : word animals : textual organisms 2 : a phylum or subkingdom of linguistic entities that are represented in almost every kind of habitat and include aphorisms, anti-aphorisms, maxims, minims, unapologetic apothegms, neokoans, sayings, left-unsaids, shamelessly proverbialist word-grabs, epigrammatological disquisitions, lapidary confections, poemlets, gnomic microtales, instant fables, and other varieties of conceptual riffs

    Words change everything. We create poems and stories to free the world from itself, to reveal the many feral faces of life. But ironically these liberating words are usually imprisoned on the page or computer screen. Out in the “real” world of day-to-day activity, we use words more bluntly. We put labels and signs on things to tame them—identify, categorize, explain, instruct, proclaim ownership. What if instead the labels could liberate the everyday world from the literal, proclaim rather than cover up the mysteries? What if they could become Logozoa—textual organisms that infest the literal with metaphor and give impetuous life and breath to meaning?

    Adopt-A-Zoa

    Scott Rettberg - 13.01.2013 - 00:23

  5. Alter ego

    Combinatory poem. The date (2006) is estimated. Archive.org first crawled this website in 2007, but Giovanna di Rosario writes in her dissertation that she accessed the wrok in 2006 (p 123).

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 28.06.2013 - 22:30

  6. Walking Blues Changes Undersea

    Note from editor: Date is estimated. Cannot find work online.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 03.07.2013 - 11:20

  7. The Prime Directive/Primärdirektivet

    Online work, in two parts + intro. Main themes: science fiction, nature. First published in 2006 by danish website Afsnit P. In the intro two books are slowly rotating, when clicking on them they each lead to one of the main parts of the piece: The Path of the Fragment and The Prime Directive. The images and texts in these are of a dark sci-fi nature, the soundtrack ambient and droney.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 16.09.2010 - 17:35

  8. De Poetry Compressor

    Ted van Lieshout developed the "Poetry Compressor," which is an app that analyses text and systematically rearranges letters and text structures. It was their answer to the question whether the internet can contribute to pen, paper, and word processors.

    David Peeters - 17.05.2021 - 16:15

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