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  1. City of dreams

    'City of dreams' is an excerpt from a work in progress entitled 'a smear of roses' and explores subjectivity, secrets, sadness and desire. The non-linear text of 'a smear of roses' ruptures traditional narrative, opening out into flightlines across the plains of madness, picking up trace memories of disturbing events, sensual and violent impulses, erotic encounters and pyschotic states.

    J. R. Carpenter - 11.10.2014 - 11:42

  2. POP! The First Human Male Pregnancy

    POP! The First Human Male Pregnancy

    Amber Strother - 07.06.2017 - 20:49

  3. A veces cubierto por las aguas

    A veces cubierto por las aguas

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 05.01.2018 - 06:25

  4. OK Texts

    "OK Texts" is a series of linked animated gifs that explores the noton of textuality and texts.

    Dene Grigar - 31.07.2018 - 21:51

  5. _Internal Damage Report_

    “Internal Damage Data” uses the structure of a multiple choice questionnaire for self assessment of internal damage to shape the first part of the poem. For each question, Mez uses option C (maybe, unsure, other…) to develop her poem, seeking to transcend the traditional yes/no binaries in such questionnaires. In the part depicted above, she uses algorithms to structure her poem: using the logic and language of programming to guide the reader’s experience of the poem.

    [From the "I Love EPoetry" “Internal Damage Data” and “Fleshis.tics” by Mez Breeze Entry.]

    mez breeze - 11.08.2018 - 22:55

  6. Aphasiasms

    A series of dix multimedia texts produced with Photoshop, 3D Studio MAX 1.2, 3D Studio R4, and other tools exhibited and later collected for frAme, issue 1. As the author states, the works reflect "media metaphors for contemporary trends in philosophical and sociological thought" that show that "multimedia culture can no longer be confined to text, but now is in the form of graphics, sound, and video, often in simultaneous configurations."

    Dene Grigar - 13.08.2018 - 21:08

  7. White-Faced Bromeliads on 20 Hectares

    White-Faced Bromeliads on 20 Hectares is a digital poem, which includes a mixture of primarily the English language with some instances of Spanish. In this work Glazier explores alternatives to our customary experiences, through the use of a generator which changes the text of the poems every 10 seconds, turning it from it’s traditional static state to one with movement and change. Furthermore, the evocation of traveling through the images and anecdotes, provides an exploration of a multilingual and multicultural experience. Additionally, the presences of the HTML code leads to a work with multiple possibilities, primarily on how the reader perceives and experiences the work due to the possible technical reading of the code and the multiple possible poetic readings.

    Lyvette Martell - 29.11.2018 - 21:39

  8. Agent Ruby

    In 2001–2 San Francisco's Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) commissioned the web project Agent Ruby (agentruby.sfmoma.org/) by San Francisco artist Lynn Hershman Leeson for its pioneering online platform e.space. Originally conceived in 1999 as a mobile application for the Palm Pilot, the project was part of Hershman's research for her 2002 film "Teknolust." In 2013, SFMOMA curated an exhibit dedicated to the history of the project entitled  "Lynn Hershman Leeson: The Agent Ruby Files."

    Johannah Rodgers - 16.07.2021 - 19:18

  9. The Seasons

    The Seasons is a hypertext poetry piece divided in to two titles “Dispossession” and “Penetration”. “Dispossession” follows a man traveling to America from his Caribbean homeland, showing an uncertain future. “Penetration” is about immigration, following a father and a daughter from Eastern Europe meeting after years apart. Mother Earth, as the nature surrounding them, is also presented as a third character.

    Heidi Haugsdal Kvinge - 21.09.2021 - 15:30

  10. Ally Farson

    Ally Farson is a whodunit film made to emulate the success of the Blair Witch Project. It's "an alledgedly true story of a female serial killer operating in 1999, that uses alleged documentary video footage and supposedly official websites of the police department as well as newsgroups on which "police officers" answer the questions of skeptical readers" (Simanowski 2014, p. 203). There are two movies in the series—Ally Farson: My Private Life and Ally Farson: On the Run.

    (Source: Simanowski, Roberto. 2014. "Reading Digital Fiction." In Analyzing Digital Fiction, edited by Alice Bell, Astrid Ensslin and Hans Rustad, 197-206. Routledge.)

    Kira Guehring - 22.09.2021 - 11:49

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