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Poetry Confronting Digital Media
Poetry Confronting Digital Media
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 30.08.2011 - 12:52
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electropoetics
Initiated on March 15, 1997, ebr's electropoetics "thread" is devoted to discussions and debates about digital poetics and writing in electronic environments. Most, but not all, of the articles published in ebr about electronic literature and digital literary art appear in this thread. The first editor of electropoetics was Joel Felix, who edited a special issue by that title. David Ciccoricco (2002-2005) and Lori Emerson later served as electropoetics thread editors.
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 01.09.2011 - 12:47
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New Media Poetry and Poetics
LEA leaps into yet another bold foray, this time revolving around the world of new media poetics. Bursting at the cyber-seams, a spiffy collection of essays by myriad authors await. The proud guest editor of this edition in Tim Peterson and he’s woven together a marvelous mix of nine essays, and curated an equally exciting gallery showcasing four illuminating artist works. (Source: LEA)
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 02.09.2011 - 10:30
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A Poem Is a Machine to Think With: Digital Poetry and the Paradox of Innovation
A Poem Is a Machine to Think With: Digital Poetry and the Paradox of Innovation
Patricia Tomaszek - 21.09.2011 - 14:46
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Early Authors of E-Literature, Platforms of the Past
A detailed discussion of the exhibit “Early Authors of Electronic Literature: The Eastgate School, Voyager Artists, and Independent Productions” (now installed at the University of Washington). Grigar looks specifically at the major technological shifts in affordances and constraints provided by early computer interfaces and the ways in which e-literature writers from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s worked with and against these interfaces. For example, she discusses the command-line interface of the Apple IIe – which was released in 1983 – as an example of an interface that exemplifies an ideology wholly different from the now dominant Graphic User Interface. Thus, the command-line interface also makes possible entirely different texts and entirely different modes of thinking/creating such as that exemplified by bp Nichols' “First Screening” from 1984.
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 05.10.2011 - 09:19
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Third Hand Plays: The Comedy of Reduction
Third Hand Plays: The Comedy of Reduction
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 10.10.2011 - 11:22
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Third Hand Plays: The Comedy of Duplication
Third Hand Plays: The Comedy of Duplication
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 10.10.2011 - 11:36
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Third Hand Plays: The Comedy of Automation
Third Hand Plays: The Comedy of Automation
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 10.10.2011 - 14:47
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Of Two Minds: Hypertext Pedagogy and Poetics
In Of Two Minds, noted hypertext novelist and writing teacher Michael Joyce explores the new technologies, mediums, and modalities for teaching and writing, ranging from interactive multimedia to virtual reality. As author of Afternoon: A Story, which the New York Times Book Review termed "the most widely read, quoted, and critiqued of all hypertext narratives," and co-developer of Storyspace, an innovative hypertext software acclaimed for offering new kinds of artistic expression, he is uniquely well qualified to explore this stimulating topic. The essays comprise what Joyce calls "theoretical narratives," woven from e-mail messages, hypertext "nodes," and other kinds of electronic text that move nomadically from one occasion or perspective to another, between the poles of art and instruction , teaching and writing. The nomadic movement of ideas is made effortless by the electronic medium, which makes it easy to cross borders (or erase them) with the swipe of a mouse, and which therefore challenges our notions of intellectual and artistic borders.
Jill Walker Rettberg - 15.10.2011 - 22:59
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Kenneth Goldsmith
A conversational interview between the with poet Kenneth Goldsmith and the literary critic Marcus Boon.
Eric Dean Rasmussen - 27.10.2011 - 13:29