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  1. Tonnus Oosterhoff

    Oosterhoff was born in Leiden, and is poet, novelist and essay-writer. He works in a small village in the empty countryside of Groningen, Netherlands. He received the Buddingh-price for his printdebut in 1990, and the Multatuliprice for his novel The Thick Heart. For his poetry-collection (Robuuste tongwerken,) een stralend plenum he recieved the Jan Campertprijs. In 2002 his first CD-rom appeared, accompanying a print colection of poetry, for which he received the prestigious VSB-price. He has continued to publish print poetry with CD ROMs (Hersenmutor, for example), and adding new works to his website, which always features a few of his digital works. These are always text-based Flash-poems, sometimes accompanied by little drawings by the author.

    yra van dijk - 21.09.2010 - 11:37

  2. Ottar Ormstad

    Ottar Ormstad has published several books of concrete poetry. He has presented video-poems and exhibited darkroom-produced photography, and also graphic art and letterprints based on his concrete poetry. In 2009, he produced his first video called ‘LYMS’ which is screened in 20 countries, including e-poetry2009 in Barcelona and the Zebra Film Poetry Festival in Berlin 2010. The video ‘when’ premiered at e-poetry2011 in Buffalo, New York.

    Ormstad’s web-poem ‘svevedikt’ (2006) was selected for the “ELMCIP Anthology of European Electronic Literature” (2012), and 'when' was selected for the 3rd collection of the Electronic Literature Organization, ELC. 

    Scott Rettberg - 19.10.2010 - 16:09

  3. Michael Joyce

    Michael Joyce (born 1945) is a professor of English at Vassar College, NY, USA, and a pioneering author and critic of electronic literature. Joyce's afternoon: a story, 1987, was among the first literary hypertexts.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 05.01.2011 - 12:16

  4. Joseph Tabbi

    Joseph Tabbi is the author of Cognitive Fictions (Minnesota 2002) and Postmodern Sublime (Cornell 1995), books that examine the effects of new technologies on contemporary American fiction. He is the founding editor of electronic book review (ebr), and has edited and introduced William Gaddis’s last fiction and collected non-fiction (Viking/Penguin). His essay on Mark Amerika appeared at the Walker Art Center’s phon:e:me site, a 2000 Webby Award nominee. Also online (the Iowa Review Web) is an essay-narrative, titled “Overwriting,” an interview, and a review of his recent work. Tabbi has served as president of the Electronic Literature Organization. He is currently a Principal Investigator at the Center for Digital Narrative, University of Bergen.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 06.01.2011 - 12:56

  5. Asunción López-Varela Azcárate

    Since 1994 Asunción López-Varela, has been a professor at Complutense University Madrid, Department of English. She specializes in nineteenth- and twentieth-century literature, comparative literature, critical theory, and media studies. Her research interests include semiotic aspects of space and time within literary representations, computer-assisted language learning, and the use of hypermedia technologies in teaching and research. She is the project leader of the SIIM Studies on Intermediality and Intercultural Mediation.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 12.01.2011 - 16:30

  6. Alexandra Saemmer

    Alexandra Saemmer is associate professor of information and communication sciences at University Paris 8. Her current research projects focus on semiotics and aesthetics of digital media, reading and writing in digital environments. She is the author and editor of several books and articles on digital literature and arts.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 12.01.2011 - 16:42

  7. Janez Strehovec

    Janez Strehovec received his Ph.D. from the University of Ljubljana, Slovenia in 1988 in Aesthetics. Since 1993 he has been working as principal researcher at the projects Theories of Cyberarts, Theories of Cyberculture, and Theories of Internet Culture and Internet Textuality, supported by the Slovenian Ministry of Science and Technology. In the nineties he taught Sociology of Popular Culture at two faculties of University of Ljubljana. He is the author of six books in the field of cultural studies and aesthetics published in Slovenia. His books include Technoculture, the Culture of Techno (1998) dealing with the subject of techno not just as a lifestyle issue and music movement but as a crucial principle of the recent artificial realities. His most recent book is The Internet Art (2004). He has also written in journals such as the Journal of Popular Culture, the Popular Culture Review, A-r-c, Afterimage and CTheory, and has presented his papers at various international conferences in Europe, Mexico, Australia and the United States.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 12.01.2011 - 16:45

  8. J. R. Carpenter

    J. R. Carpenter is a British-Canadian artist, writer, and researcher working across performance, print, and digital media. She was born in Nova Scotia, Canada, in 1972. She lived in Montreal, Canada, from 1990 - 2009. She now lives and works in England.

    Carpenter has been using the Internet as a medium for the creation and dissemination of experimental texts since 1993. Her work has been presented at museums, galleries, conferences, and festivals around the world and is included in The Rhizome ArtBase, the Electronic Literature Collection Volumes One, Two, Three, and Four, and the ELMCIP Anthology of European Electronic Literature.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 12.01.2011 - 16:48

  9. María Mencía

    Artist practitioner, Senior Lecturer in Digital Media at Kingston University and researcher working in digital media to create interactive installations, net.art, textual poetics and sound pieces. She holds a PhD in Digital Poetics and Digital Art by the University of the Arts-London. Maria has been awarded various grants to develop practice-led research in the area of digital poetics and digital art. In 2007 she was awarded the 2005 TIES Grant by the Key Centre of Design Computing and Cognition, Faculty of Architecture, Design and Planning, The University of Sydney, Australia. In 2005-06, the Promising Researcher Fellowship (2005-06) by Kingston University to collaborate with the Media Research Lab -New York University, NY, USA, in her project Autocalligraphy: Electronic and Generative Handwriting and in 2005, an AHRC Small Grants in the Creative and Performing Arts to develop Cityscapes.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 12.01.2011 - 16:51

  10. Loss Pequeño Glazier

    Poet Loss Pequeño Glazier is E-Poetry President & Artistic Director, Director of the Electronic Poetry Center, and Professor, Media Study, SUNY Buffalo. E-Poetry 2011 will be held in Buffalo in May, 2011. The EPC is an extensive resource for innovative and digital poetry. Glazier's work in digital writing focuses on code, in natural language, translation, and computer programming, or as language poeisis. He is author of Anatman, Pumpkin Seed, Algorithm (Salt, 2003), Digital Poetics (Alabama, 2002), Small Press (Greenwood, 1992), and poems, essays, film, visual art, sound, digital, as well as projects for installation, dance, music, and performance. Exhibitions include Collectif Aixois d'Art Contemporain, Neuberger Museum SUNY Purchase, Royal Festival Hall, London, Instituto del Libro, Havana, Guggenheim Museum, UCLA Hammer Museum, Kulturforum Potsdamer Platz, Berlin, California Institute of the Arts, University of London, Le Divan du Monde, Paris, and Bowery Poetry Club, New York.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 12.01.2011 - 16:55

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