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  1. Electronic Literature Organization 2002: State of the Arts Symposium

    On April 4-6, 2002, many of the leading writers, critics, publishers and readers working in the field of electronic literature gathered in Los Angeles for the first Electronic Literature Organization Symposium. Titled "State of the Arts," the symposium featured three nights and two days of readings, demonstrations, and concentrated discussions on the state of the arts of electronic literature. Major Sponsorship of the State of the Arts Symposium was provided by the Ford Foundation. Keynote speakers for the event included novelist Robert Coover, critic Katherine Hayles, and author and publisher Jason Epstein. The event was a "Symposium" in the truest sense of the word: each panel featured experts engaging in a lively interchange of ideas. These moderated discussions allowed the panelists to share their insights and engage in dialogue about their specific topic.

    (Source: Conference website, archived by the Electronic Literature Organization).

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 10.03.2011 - 10:28

  2. Across Media: Contemporary Literature and Media Culture

    Across Media: Contemporary Literature and Media Culture

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 16.03.2011 - 15:10

  3. Digital Arts and Culture 1999 Conference

    The Second Annual Digital Arts and Culture Conference (DAC '99) will bring artists, media practitioners, scientists, theorists, and members of industry to Atlanta, Georgia to explore established and evolving forms of digital culture.

    Keynote speakers and performers at DAC '99 include: Robert Coover, Elliott Peter Earls, N. Katherine Hayles, and Michael Joyce.

    Participants in the DAC '99 program include more than 100 scholars, artists, and performers from nearly a dozen countries.

    Many of the presentations and performances during DAC '99 were audio- or videotaped for later "webcast" over the Internet (NOTE: files now offline).

    (Source: Conference website)

    Scott Rettberg - 25.03.2011 - 16:31

  4. Digital Arts and Culture 2009 Conference and Exhibition

    Digital Arts and Culture 2009 is the 8th in an international series of conferences begun in 1998. DAC is recognized as an interdisciplinary event of high intellectual caliber. This iteration of DAC will dwell on the specificities of embodiment and cultural, social and physical location with respect to digital technologies and networked communications.

    (Source: DAC '09 site)

    Scott Rettberg - 26.03.2011 - 12:50

  5. Digital Arts and Culture 2005 Conference

    Digital Arts and Culture 2005 Conference

    Scott Rettberg - 26.03.2011 - 18:05

  6. Futures of Digital Studies 2010

    The conference focused on the dialogue between forms of digital literacy connected with recent technological developments in networked and programmable media in relation to human expression and forms of representation. We seek to put in conversation digital artists and digital critics in order to examine the "state of the art" of digitally mediated practices and to envision possible futures for the current overlapping platforms, software, formats, hardware and artistic processes through which we experience digital culture. The two-day conference's thematic focus on the 'literary' in the digital age was integrated with a fundamental attention to visual art, music and sound, computer science, and other aspects of digital culture through an art exhibit and a concluding roundtable videoconference session with an international group of participants.

    Maria Engberg - 28.03.2011 - 16:05

  7. Electronic Literature Organization 2007 Symposium: The Future of Electronic Literature

    The Electronic Literature Organization’s Future of Electronic Literature Symposium at MITH at the University of Maryland, College Park was an event that brought e-lit writers, scholars, and an interested public together for an open mouse/open mic, a daylong symposium, and an ELO board meeting. Highlights included Katherine Hayle’s keynote (nicely summarized at jilltxt), considering the idea of “literary” vs. “literature” and providing very intelligent close readings of a variety of works of electronic literature, readings from new works by Stephanie Strickland, Rob Kendall, Nick Montfort, Deena Larsen, and others, as well as three very good panel discussions. The process-intensive panel looked at the idea of process from several different angles ranging from process-intensive collaboration, to natural language interface processing, to story generation.

    Mark Marino - 28.03.2011 - 16:32

  8. Modern Language Association Convention 2007

    Modern Language Association Convention 2007

    Patricia Tomaszek - 05.05.2011 - 18:17

  9. Incubation 2000: a trAce International Conference on Writing and the Internet

    Incubation 2000: a trAce International Conference on Writing and the Internet

    Scott Rettberg - 06.05.2011 - 15:20

  10. Writers Conference: Mind the Gap: Print, New Media, Art

    Writers Conference: Mind the Gap: Print, New Media, Art

    Patricia Tomaszek - 20.05.2011 - 05:48

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