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  1. *water writes always in *plural

    *water writes always in *plural

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 18.02.2011 - 20:29

  2. Rice

    Rice is a hypertextual anthology of poems focusing on my experience as a Western tourist in Vietnam. Issues of colonialism, war, poverty, and cultural difference arise. Technically and aesthetically, Rice belongs to an early period of web-based poetry. It uses Shockwave, popup windows, and frames. (Source: Author description from ELC 1)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 24.02.2011 - 19:11

  3. Nightmare Wanders Father's Song

    The four words that comprise the title--Nightmare, Wanders, Fathers, Song--are hidden in the black field of the opening screen, to be found by readers as they explore with cursors. The title thus changes from reader to reader. It may include all four words, as in "Song Wanders Fathers Nightmare," if the reader sticks around the opening screen long enough; or the title may simply be "Nightmare," or "Song," if the reader follows the first link found. You see the possibilities. In this new poem . . . Harrell brings a traditional lyric sensibility to the digital fields of hypertext poetry.

    Scott Rettberg - 12.10.2011 - 11:44

  4. mayday

    Hypertext centered on Mass Observation at the time of New Labor's rise to power, a contributory crowd-sourced work in HTML.

    "This site went on-line at 05:00hrs (BST) May 1st 1998, unfolding over the day on an hourly basis until 04:00 hrs (BST) May 2nd. It presents selected extracts from a project, initiated by poet / publisher cris cheek as a nod to Mass Observation, which received a wide range of texts and images from the everyday on Mayday 97. We invited responses throughout Mayday 98, and they were uploaded as they came in.The site now stands as a writing, drawn from those details of their everyday lives that its contributors wished to register. Our responses to the accumulating mass of observations form part of what became, for us, a 'performance' of 'mayday'.....

    Scott Rettberg - 04.05.2012 - 13:25

  5. Die Aaleskorte der Ölig

    "Die Aaleskorte der Ölig" is a combination adventure with 20 scenes by Dirk Günther and Frank Klötgen which won the Pegasus Award of DIE ZEIT, the german prize for internet literature, in 1998. It is based on a short story with only one perspective. Before the adventure starts, the reader has a chance to participate by choosing the perspective for each scene. The five protagonists are the woman Ölig, Hohmann, a group of children and an eel. Afterwards the so called "movie" starts. Every scene has a different picture and text to describe the plot which changes based on the decisions of the user in the beginning.

    Scott Rettberg - 19.10.2012 - 14:17

  6. POPstory

    POPstory, ein Netz-Literatur und Hypertextprojekt; nichts statisches, ständig in Bewegung, ständig wachsend und sich verändernd. Über ein Redaktionssystem konnte die Website um neue Texte erweitert werden. Zum Einsatz kam eines der frühesten Content-Management-Systeme (noch bevor der Begriff 'CMS' geboren war).

    POPstory lesen + POPstories schreiben. Lektüre für e-People, für eine vernetzte Leserschaft und für alle, die auch ohne Bücher lesen wollen.
    An POPstory kann sich aber auch beteiligen, wer gerne selber schreibt und Lust am erfinden abgedrehter Geschichten hat. Denn POPstory ist eine offene Textplattform für kreative Leute und Menschen mit ausgefallenen Erzähl-Ideen. Technik muß dabei kein Hinderniss sein, im Gegenteil: alle Beiträge stehen auf klick online, jede/r kann bei POPstory zum Online-Publisher werden. Einfach einloggen und schreiben.

    Spielregeln: Jede/r kann bei POPstory zum Autor/zur Autorin werden und Texte im Sinnes des Plots beitragen. Der Phantasie und Kreativität sind hier keine Grenzen gesetzt.

    Jörgen Schäfer - 07.11.2012 - 16:38

  7. Bread.Crumbs

    "The (scratch) novel CRACKED EGGS AND WASTED TIME is very (very) loosely based in simultaneous (mis)readings of D. H. Lawrence's WOMEN IN LOVE and THE EGYPTIAN BOOK OF THE DEAD, commingled with other additional nonsense..." From the introductory page.

    Sissel Hegvik - 23.01.2013 - 20:34

  8. NobodyHere

    A creative website that contains more than can be easily labelled as poetry, art, or narrative, though it certainly contains that and more. Launched in 1998, the site incorporates multiple Web technologies in very coherent fashion to create a hypertext of musings, anxieties, joys, searches for companionship, yearnings, and more navigable through interfaces populated by a variety of insects. Each page in this hypertext is a discovery: a thoughtful exploration of an idea through art, language, and metaphor. (Source: Leonardo Flores, I ♥ E-Poetry)

    Hannelen Leirvåg - 28.02.2013 - 20:07

  9. Damascene

    Damascene

    Dan Kvilhaug - 18.03.2013 - 17:41

  10. Como el cielo los ojos (Like the sky the eyes)

    Como el cielo los ojos se concibe desde el primer momento como una novela hipertextual: como un juego de vínculos y de relaciones intertextuales. Una vez que pulsamos en el acceso a la novela, aparece ante nosotros una cuadrícula, en la que cada sección está ocupada por un ojo. En el eje vertical leemos tres nombres (Javier, Iñaqui y Paco) y el eje horizontal está numerado del uno al trece. Tres personajes, trece tiempos y una sola novela, un solo acontecimiento desencadenador: «Isabel ha muerto...» No sólo importa el texto en cuanto a la narración sino que la disposición ocupa un lugar principal: «Seleccione personaje y tiempo pulsando sobre un ojo en la cuadrícula» rezan unas líneas en negrita. [Source: http://www.badosa.com/bin/obra.pl?id=m001 ]

    Dan Kvilhaug - 29.03.2013 - 12:39

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