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  1. From Oral Poetry to Tridimensional Poetry

    Memory defines human existence both individually and collectively: it is necessary for the evolution of the person and society. The loss of memory leads to the physical and intellectual death of identity. In order to avoid and exorcise existential oblivion, mankind has developed systems to pass on memory and preserve it. One of the oldest of these is poetry that, thanks to its rhythm and rhyme, makes the precise memorizing of a text easier. Thus it effectively communicates the deeds of heroes as well as the prayers, ideals and sentiments that characterize human beings and their culture. Society, thanks also to the heritage of knowledge that has been passed down, continues to evolve and change rapidly: the new technologies transform art, modifying the codes of language and above all the inclusion and typology of the data that constitutes the collective memory. In the era of motion pictures poetry loses some of its evocative effect and its function for transmission. The visual memory is predominant because the brain assimilates information without making the effort of concentrating and decoding input, for example from the sound to the word or from the sign to the word.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 12.01.2011 - 16:47

  2. Aspects of Experiencing Poetry in Digital Media

    Digital poetry uses both the machine and natural language, therefore the experience of digital poetry always lives on the borders of artifice and art or appearance and essence, where the borders fades. The essay searches for a native experience of poetry within digital media which is not a translation, representation or Ecphrasis of an existing piece of poetry by focusing on inter-activity and programming that make the poet-programmer and reader-player to meet and be involved in a poem; The essay tries to reveal the limitations of the machine language in creating a digital poem by concentrating on the syntax as an open-source consciousness of the natural language and the non-open-source nature of operating systems and compilers in the instant of writing poetry as the consciousness of the machine.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 12.01.2011 - 17:21

  3. Close-­Reading: Digital Poetry

    Close-­Reading: Digital Poetry

    Scott Rettberg - 20.05.2011 - 13:58

  4. Aesthetic Animism: Digital Poetry as Ontological Probe

    Digital poetry is a multimedia hybrid-art-form, a subset of visual language fusing with digital technology, increasingly mediated by networks. Contemporary poems are animated interfaces; and they often utilize dynamic interactive typography superimposed over video, generative or 3D environments. A brief list of the disciplines involved: visual art, sound composition, literature, media studies, computer programming.

    Multimedia-hybrid digital poetry means that the term ‘text’ is insufficient.
    Future theorists will require terminology specific to the domain, I suggest:

    -TAV (text-audio-visual)
    - TAVT (a tav in a 3D territory)
    - TAVIT (an interactive tavt)

    Patricia Tomaszek - 04.07.2011 - 12:11

  5. Mobilizing the Poli

    A detailed review of Judd Morrissey and Mark Jeffery’s The Precession. Published July 14, 2011.

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    Judd Morrissey’s newest work, theprecession.org is a website that redefines the act of reading literature on the internet in order to draw attention to the ways that reading is changing in our world. The website truly functions as the new book, with chapters that organize his intentions within the project into discrete capitulations of his ideas. My paper is mostly an analysis of the centerpiece of the website, POLI, because of its time-based nature: it uses real-time data capture and provides an extended period of time for the reading of the piece itself. POLI is a significant piece of contemporary literature because of its consciousness becomes political comment through the uses of our various languages.

    Scott Rettberg - 22.07.2011 - 13:08

  6. Poetry Confronting Digital Media

    Poetry Confronting Digital Media

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 30.08.2011 - 12:52