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  1. Twitterwurking

    This guest performance in the New Media Scotland Twitter account during her residency in July 2008 featured a daily tweet for each day of the month— making a sequence of 31 silky lines mezangelle.

    _Twitterwurking_comprised of sequential “tweets” posted via a microblogging platform called Twitter. The work itself was written in my mezangelle language- a type of merging of programming languages/code with poetic elements. The Twitterwurk sought to incorporate specific users into the narrative by typing the “@” symbol before their name. The users were then made aware of this focused reply and thus deliberately enfolded into the tweetstream/project.

    Quoted from I ♥ E-Poetry and "_Twitterwurking_" documentation.

    Leonardo Flores - 13.03.2013 - 18:42

  2. #OutsideUrDoor

    exhibited via a Live Trans-Reality Performance Event held simutaneously via Twitter streams, The Web, and geophysically at the Inspace Gallery as part of Inspace’s “No One Can Hear You Scream”/The Third International Conference on Interactive Digital Storytelling: “…the knitting 2gether of the #OutsideUrDoor synthetic/real-time action created through the @MrShamble, @Nozfera2 and @vvolfmaan characters via multiple projections/soundtrack/linked c[l]ues with geophysical audience participation [and those exclusively in the twittersphere] was marvellous. the [micro in more than 1 sense] narrative gradually unfolding in front of a live audience based in Scotland…just…mixed reality ftw:)…this type of net-native work[ing] really extends + [weirdly] collapses so many conventions/distinctions.”

    Leonardo Flores - 14.03.2013 - 21:58

  3. @Jhave2

    For the past three years, Jhave has been using his Twitter account as a platform for a poetic constraint. Whenever a person follows him (that is, not a 'bot) he writes a tweet poem that is exactly 140 character long. As one can see in All My Tweets, he had started this practice before, but committed to it on February 8, 2010-- "continuing the anti-pragmatic stance of twitting (doesn't that sound absurd?) only whn followed by a non-robot and always with exact letters"-- and has since adhered strictly to the constraint.

    Quoted from I ♥ E-Poetry.

    Leonardo Flores - 16.03.2013 - 11:00

  4. @frodegrytten (microfictions on Twitter)

    Hver dag fra 2011-2013 posted Frode Grytten svært korte noveller på 140 tegn til Twitter. Ofte brukes journalistiske konvensjoner, som å angi alder på personene i parantes, og nesten alltid er tematikken trist.

    Ingrid Dyrkolbotn - 17.03.2013 - 13:27

  5. #Hvisjegvarhvit

    #Hvisjegvarhvit (translated: #ifiwerewhite) is a norwegian hashtag that turned up in my twitter feed the evening of 19. March 2013. The twitter user @AbuHus started to post tweets about his experiences of being a colored person in Norway. His first tweet said: “#ifiwerewhite people would believe me when I say I am from Norway”. Soon several colored twitter users used the hashtag to tell stories from their lives as colored Norwegians. Through generalizing how white Norwegians act towards colored people also white Norwegians could get a feeling of how it feels to be generalized on behalf of your skin color. This wordplay shows how collaborative creativity can arise in social media based on the social relations in the Norwegian community. Among funny and entertaining tweets about being colored in Norway there is a recurring theme telling a about a reality that white Norwegians do not experience. We are not asked questions or being regarded with suspicion just because we are white. @AbuHus gave the colored Norwegians a voice which reached beyond twitter, and was noted by papers like Aftenposten and Dagbladet.

    Ingrid Dyrkolbotn - 20.03.2013 - 11:57

  6. @everyword

    @everyword is a Twitter bot that tweeted every word in the English language, in alphabetical order, one at a time, every half hour. <@everyword started its task in late 2007 and completed it in 2014. Along the way, it picked up over 100,000 followers and inspired dozens of parodies and imitations. The project, initially inspired by John F. Simon's Every Icon, was an exercise in the potential synergies of social media and experimental writing techniques extending over time: What happens when single words, invested with their own lexical context, are juxtaposed with ever-changing, personalized Twitter feeds? How does social media as a channel shape and afford the presentation of writing?

    Leonardo Flores - 20.03.2013 - 17:37

  7. Latour Swag

    This Twitter bot produces a mashup of the “Bruno Latourbot” and original tweets that use the #swag hashtag. (Source: Leonardo Flores, I ♥ E-Poetry)

    Hannelen Leirvåg - 08.04.2013 - 14:10

  8. Justin Buber

    This anonymous Twitter account find poetry in remixing philosophy with the pop celebrity tweet.

    Hannelen Leirvåg - 08.04.2013 - 14:32

  9. Kantye West

    This anonymous Twitter account find poetry in remixing philosophy with the celebrity tweet.

    Hannelen Leirvåg - 08.04.2013 - 14:36

  10. georgelazenby

    This Twitter account is part of an artistic and literary performance in social media.

    Hannelen Leirvåg - 08.04.2013 - 14:47

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