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  1. Is There a Language Problem?

    R.M. Berry on the recuperation of politicized language, in (and through) the fiction of Marianne Hauser and Lidia Yuknavitch.

    (ebr)

    Juan Manuel Altadill Casas - 17.10.2017 - 15:26

  2. God Help Us

    A Review of Malise Ruthven’s A Fury for God: The Islamist
    Attack on America, from Tim Keane.

    (ebr)

    Juan Manuel Altadill Casas - 17.10.2017 - 15:48

  3. Using Electricity

    Using Electricity is a series of computer generated books, meant to reward reading in conventional and unconventional ways. The series title takes a line from the computer generated poem “A House of Dust,” developed by Alison Knowles with James Tenney in 1967. This work, a FORTRAN computer program and a significant early generator of poetic text, combines different lines to produce descriptions of houses. The series is edited by Nick Montfort.

    Scott Rettberg - 02.10.2019 - 12:19

  4. Essential works of Foucault

    Essential works of Foucault

    University of Bergen Library - 14.04.2020 - 12:55

  5. Electronic Literature [Frame]works for the Creative Digital Humanities

    “Electronic Literature [Frame]works for the Creative Digital Humanities,” edited by Scott Rettberg and Alex Saum-Pascual, gathers a selection of articles exploring the evolving relationship between electronic literature and the digital humanities in Europe, North and South America. Looking at the combination of practices and methodologies that come about through e-lit’s production, study, and dissemination, these articles explore the disruptive potential of electronic literature to decenter and complement the DH field. Creativity is central and found at all levels and spheres of e-lit, but as the articles in this gathering show, there is a need to redeploy creative practice critically to address the increasing instrumentalization of the digital humanities and to turn the digital humanities towards the digital cultures of the present.

    Alvaro Seica - 07.09.2020 - 00:44

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