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  1. El diario del niño burbuja

    El proyecto Bubbleboy fue concebido para ser realizado a partir de 100 posts, durante cien días consecutivos. Establecí, a manera de constraint oulipiano, que cada post constaría de una imagen al azar, encontrada en un buscador de imágenes y de un texto breve que de alguna manera se relacionara con la misma. El Diario del Niño Burbuja se constituyó como un texto a la deriva y en proceso, sin una trama o dirección preestablecida. Frágil e inconstante, Burbuja, está en continua amenaza de desaparición. Al igual que las burbujas flotan en un hiperespacio constituido por múltiples dimensiones, Bubbleboy habita el ciberespacio, lugar igualmente multidimensional que propone una nueva espacialidad y una nueva temporalidad sin órdenes lineales o causales precisos.

    (Escrito por la autora, Belén Gache, publicado en belengache.net)

    Maya Zalbidea - 27.02.2014 - 20:55

  2. Nada tiene sentido

    Nada tiene sentido (Nothing makes sense) by Isabel Ara and Iñaki Lorenzo is a digital diary whose narrator is desperate because he cannot get out of his bedroom, the only thing he can do is typing how he feels on his computer. Once we are reading and watching this autobiography we realize that we are reading the reflections of a schizophrenic person that finishes by losing the logical word order and whose identity is fragmented until it dissolves itself into the virtual space. ("Literatura digital en español" de Dolores Romero López) (http://www.mcu.es/lectura/pdf/v11_dolores_romero.pdf)

    Maya Zalbidea - 15.06.2014 - 21:17

  3. Ted the Caver

    Ted the Caver is a gothic hypertext fiction piece regarded as one of the earliest examples of 'creepypasta' or online horror legend. Published to the free Angelfire web hosting service in early 2001, it’s presented as the authentic hypertextual diary of a man called Ted and documents his exploration of a 'mystery' cave system. During publication, Ted the Caver gained broad popularity. Although this has since waned, it continues to be shared among those who discuss gothic experiences (Taylor, 2020).

    Ted the Caver has been credited with pioneering two foundational aspects of online horror fiction—the use of real-time updates and the use of hyperlinks, the latter of which gave the work "a distinctive digital quality that could not have been reproduced on paper" (Crawford, 2019).

    Works cited:

    T. R. Taylor, "Horror Memes and Digital Culture," in The Palgrave Handbook of Contemporary Gothic, C. Bloom, Ed., Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan, 2020, pp. 985-1003.

    Tegan Pyke - 24.04.2023 - 16:01