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  1. Introduction: Juncture and Form in New Media Criticism

    Introduction: Juncture and Form in New Media Criticism

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 31.01.2011 - 11:37

  2. What is and Toward What End Do We Read Digital Literature?

    What is and Toward What End Do We Read Digital Literature?

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 31.01.2011 - 11:39

  3. Strickland and Lawson Jarmillo's slippingglimpse: Distributed Cognition at/in Work

    Strickland and Lawson Jarmillo's slippingglimpse: Distributed Cognition at/in Work

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 31.01.2011 - 12:57

  4. Stephanie Strickland

    Stephanie Strickland’s 10 books of poetry include How the Universe Is Made: Poems New & Selected (2019) and Ringing the Changes (2020), a code-generated project for print based on the ancient art of tower bell-ringing. Other books include Dragon Logic and The Red Virgin: A Poem of Simone Weil.

    Strickland’s 12 collaborative digital works include slippingglimpse, a poem that maps text to Atlantic wave patterns; the Vniverse app for iPad, interactive companion to the print V : WaveTercets / Losing L’una; Sea and Spar Between, a poem generator paired with Duels—Duets, a companion generator reflecting on Sea and Spar’s composition and paired also with cut to fit the toolspun course, the Sea and Spar code glossed.

    Recent work includes Liberty Ring! (2020), interactive companion to Ringing the Changes; House of Trust, a generative poem in praise of free public libraries; and Hours of the Night, an MP4 PowerPoint poem probing age and sleep.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 31.01.2011 - 13:12

  5. Artificial Poetry: On Aesthetic Perception in Computer-Aided Literature

    Artificial Poetry: On Aesthetic Perception in Computer-Aided Literature

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 31.01.2011 - 15:39

  6. Katja Kwastek

    Dr. Katja Kwastek is an art historian and coordinator of research at the school of arts at Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich. She served as vice-director of the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute Media.Art.Research. in Linz (Austria), where she directed the research projects on interactive art until 2009. Prior to this, she worked as assistant professor at the art history department of the Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich and was a Visiting Scholar at the Rhode Island School of Design (Providence, RI). Her research focuses on contemporary and new media art, media theory and aesthetics. She has curated exhibition projects, lectured widely and published many books and essays, including Ohne Schnur. Art and Wireless Communication, Frankfurt (2004). She recently finished a book manuscript on the aesthetics of interaction in digital art.

    (Soruce: Transmediale.de)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 31.01.2011 - 15:42

  7. The Possible Worlds of Hypertext Fiction

    Publisher's blurb: Written in hypertext and read from a computer, hypertext novels exist as a collection of textual fragments, which must be pieced together by the reader.The Possible Worlds of Hypertext Fiction offers a new critical theory tailored specifically for this burgeoning genre, providing a much needed body of criticism in a key area of new media fiction.

    Table of Contents: The Universe of Hypertext Fiction
    Hypertext Fiction and the Importance of Worlds
    Contradictions, World Views and the Nature of Truth in Michael Joyce's (1987) afternoon--a story
    Going, Going, Gone: the Slippery Worlds of Stuart Moulthrop's (1995) Victory Garden
    Is there a Mary/Shelley in this World? Parody and Counterparts in Shelley Jackson's (1997) Patchwork Girl
    The Colourful Worlds of Richard Holeton's (2001) Figurski at Findhorn on Acid
    Bibliography
    Index

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 01.02.2011 - 11:43

  8. Kiene Brillenburg Wurth

    Kiene Brillenburg Wurth works as an Associate Professor with the Department of Comparative Literature at Utrecht University. In her research, she focuses on aesthetic theory, literary theory and intermediality, especially the relations between literature and music in the 18th-, 19th-, and 20th centuries. She has published on the sublime, music, British and German Romanticism, philosohpy of art, and post-modern philosophy.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 02.02.2011 - 15:37

  9. Kind of Blue

    An email novel that forms a sequel to Rob Wittig's Blue Company, originally sent out in emails to a small group of readers over the course of the summer of 2002, and later published on the web as an archive of emails in August 2003 by frAme Journal of Culture and Technology.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 02.02.2011 - 22:03

  10. Jan Baetens

    Jan Baetens is professor of cultural studies at the University of Leuven. He has
    widely published (most often in French) on word and image studies, particularly
    in the field of the so-called minor genres (graphic novel, photonovel,
    novelization) and contemporary French writing and poetry, more specifically in
    the field of constrained writing.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 04.02.2011 - 12:25

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