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  1. Frode Grytten

    Frode Grytten

    Ingrid Dyrkolbotn - 17.03.2013 - 13:24

  2. Belén Gache

    Belén Gache (Buenos Aires, 1960) is a Spanish-Argentinian novelist and experimental writer.[1] Of Spanish and Gibraltarian descent, she was born in Buenos Aires. She lives in Madrid. She graduated from the University of Buenos Aires were she was professor in narratology and literary theory. Her work has diversified into different literary forms. Departing from narrative, she became a pioneer of electronic literature producing since 1996 various forms of expanded and hypertextual writings. (Source: Wikipedia)

    Maya Zalbidea - 23.08.2013 - 11:30

  3. Scott McCloud

    Scott McCloud (born Scott McLeod on June 10, 1960) is an American cartoonist and comics theorist. He is best known for his non-fiction books about comics, Understanding Comics (1993), Reinventing Comics (2000), and Making Comics (2006).

    (source: Wikipedia)

    Hannah Ackermans - 07.04.2016 - 14:23

  4. Lars Elleström

    Elleström has written and edited several books, including Divine Madness: On Interpreting Literature, Music, and the Visual Arts Ironically (Bucknell University Press, 2002), Media Borders, Multimodality and Intermediality (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010) and Media Transformation: The Transfer of Media Characteristics Among Media (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014). He has also published numerous articles on poetry, gender, irony, semiotics, and in particular intermediality.

    (source: university profile)

    Hannah Ackermans - 29.11.2016 - 15:09

  5. Neil Gaiman

    Neil Gaiman's work has been honoured with many awards internationally, including the Newbery and Carnegie Medals. His books and stories have also been honoured with 4 Hugos, 2 Nebulas, 1 World Fantasy Award, 4 Bram Stoker Awards, 6 Locus Awards, 2 British SF Awards, 1 British Fantasy Award, 3 Geffens, 1 International Horror Guild Award and 2 Mythopoeic Awards. Full list here.

    (Source: http://www.neilgaiman.com/About_Neil)

    Hannah Ackermans - 07.02.2017 - 15:24

  6. Miguel Azguime

    Miguel Azguime studied percussion and is a composer, performer and poet. With Paula Azguime, he founded several groups performing jazz and improvised music, including the Miso Ensemble, a contemporary music duo. As a composer, Azguime composes for diverse formations – instrumental and/or vocal with or without elec- tronics, tape music, sound poetry, and also music for exhibitions, sound installa- tions, electroacoustic theatre, dance and cinema. Azguime’s works were performed by the Smith Quartet, California EAR Unit, BBC Singers, etc., and his work has been regularly presented at major festivals of contemporary music around the world. He is currently developing an Electroacoustic Theatre and new op-Era concepts. His multimedia opera “Salt Itinerary” transcends theatrical and music conventions, re ecting on art and madness, revolving around languages, words as sources of meaning and words as sources of sound.

    Mona Pihlamäe - 11.09.2017 - 12:48

  7. Stan Douglas

    Canadian photographer and video artist Stan Douglas challenges viewers’ ideas about narrative by creating non-linear, sometimes randomly generated video installations that can continue for days. Douglas’s work engages directly with a variety of source material, from Samuel Beckett’s teleplays to recognizably post-war images in the vein of press photography from that era. Douglas’s films are often accompanied by collections of photographs, as seen in Le Detroit (1999/2000), made after the series Detroit Photos (1997-1998), both of which explore decay and reinvention in beleaguered Detroit.

    Jana Jankovska - 26.09.2018 - 13:25

  8. Joseph Paul Tabbi

    Joseph Tabbi is a US literary scholar and theorist, notable for his contributions to the fields of American literature and electronic literature. Tabbi received a Ph.D. from the University of Toronto in 1989 for a dissertation titled "The Psychology of Machines: Technology and Personal Identity in the Work of Norman Mailer and Thomas Pynchon."

    Tabbi is also the founder of Consortium on Electronic Literature (CELL), an "open access, non-commercial resource offering centralized access to literary databases, archives, and institutional programs" in the humanities.

    Among his works are Postmodern Sublime: Technology and American Writing from Mailer to Cyberpunk and Cognitive Fictions.  He was the first scholar granted access to the archives of the reclusive novelist William Gladdis and is the author of Nobody Grew but the Business: On the Life and Work of William Gaddis and the editor of The Bloomsbury Handbook of Electronic Literature, Post-Digital: Critical Debates from electronic book review, and an additional forthcoming volume from Bloomsbury Publishing. 

    Alisa Nikolaevna Ammosova - 28.09.2021 - 15:40

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