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  1. Call-for-Papers Texto Digital: "Digital Literature in English: A Trancultural/Transliterary Approach"

    Texto Digital invites submissions of papers on the theme of transcultural/transliterary readings of digital literature in English. Texto Digital’s June issue 2012 will be dedicated to present the current state of digital literature in English, with special emphasis placed on works or readings which bring to the fore the blurring of cultural and literary boundaries. Our transliterary approach invites reflection on literary proposals which transcend particular literary traditions and cultures, using their digital nature to make the blurring of boundaries effective. From writers of various cultures using the English language as their medium for literary dissemination, passing by unexpected ideal cyber-readers of English digital literature, to works which deal with cultural identity, nomadism, migrations, hibridity, etc.

    Maria Goicoechea - 14.03.2012 - 17:56

  2. ACM Hypertext 1987

    The first conference on Hypertext, and the place where the Storyspace software and Joyce's hypertext afternoon were first presented in public.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 26.03.2012 - 13:07

  3. ACM Hypertext 2005

    The sixteenth ACM Hypertext conference was held in Salzburg, Austria. 

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 26.03.2012 - 13:17

  4. The Digital Subject: Questioning Hypermnesia

    CFP: The Digital Subject: Questioning Hypermnesia
    International and transdisciplinary symposium
    Labex Arts-H2H project
    University of Paris 8 Vincennes Saint-Denis, November 13-15, 2012

    New extended deadline for submissions: July 1st, 2012

    Keynote speakers

    - Bernard Croisile, Chair, Department of Neuropsychology, Neurological Hospital of Lyon

    - N. Katherine Hayles, Professor, Duke University

    - Lydia H. Liu, Professor, Columbia University

    - Scott Rettberg, Professor, University of Bergen, Co-founder of Electronic Literature Organization and Project Head, ELMCIP 

    - Jean-Michel Salanskis, Professor of Philosophy, University of Paris Ouest Nanterre

    - Bernard Stiegler, Philosopher, President of Ars Industrialis, Head of Institut de Recherche et d’Innovation (Centre Georges Pompidou)

    Arnaud Regnauld - 17.04.2012 - 20:08

  5. Network Archaeology

    The Network Archaeology conference at Miami University, co-convened by cris cheek and Nicole Starosielski, brought together scholars and practitioners to explore the resonances between digital networks and “older” (perhaps still emergent) systems of circulation; from roads to cables, from letter-writing networks to digital ink. Drawing on recent research in media archaeology, network archaeology may be seen as a method for re-orienting the temporality and spatiality of network studies. Network archaeology might pay attention to the history of distribution technologies, location and control of geographical resources, the emergence of circulatory models, proximity and morphology, network politics and power, and the transmission properties of media. What can we learn about contemporary cultural production and circulation from the examination of network histories? How can we conceptualize the polychronic developments of networks, including their growth, adaptation, and resistances?

    J. R. Carpenter - 01.05.2012 - 11:18

  6. American Comparative Literature Association 2012

    The presidential theme of the ACLA 2012 was "Collapse/Catastrophe/Change".
    From the Lisbon earthquake of 1755 to 9/11 to the recent upheavals in the Middle East, the language of collapse and catastrophe, of crisis and change has come to dominate the public sphere. What figures and tropes produce and recuperate such events? How have they been represented differently in different periods and across linguistic and national boundaries? Economic meltdown, financial collapse, environmental depletion and disaster, trauma, the crisis in the humanities, in the foreign languages, in comparative literature itself: we are besieged by a discourse of crisis. At the same time, discourse itself seems to be in crisis, on the brink of collapse from the strain of having to reinvent itself with each new cataclysm without becoming redundant or incommensurate. What remains of terms like “revolution,” “democracy,” “justice,” “tragedy,” “community,” “freedom”? How are they mediated culturally? nationally? globally? Can the literary re-imagine so as to renew? What is the relation between figuration and change?

    Patricia Tomaszek - 08.05.2012 - 14:31

  7. ACM Hypertext 2004

    ACM Hypertext 2004

    Scott Rettberg - 25.05.2012 - 14:12

  8. &Now 2012: New Writing in Paris: Exchanges and Cross-Fertilizations

    &NOW is a festival of fiction, poetry, and staged play readings; literary rituals, performance pieces (digital, sound, and otherwise), electronic and multimedia projects; and intergenre literary work of all kinds, including criti-fictional presentations and creatively critical papers. We particularly encourage pieces that promote linguistic and genre transgressions, along with literary artworks that promote interdisciplinary explorations and conversations with past, present, or future literary concerns and movements.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 01.06.2012 - 12:12

  9. Translating E-Literature

    The first international conference on translating E-literature will take place from 12 to 14 June at the Universities of Paris 8 Vincennes-Saint-Denis and Paris 7 Diderot Denis. The conference is organized by OTNI: Objets textuels non identifiés (UTO: Unidentified Textual Objects), a research project into the evolution of textuality in the digital age. It is supported by the Electronic Literature Organization.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 01.06.2012 - 12:18

  10. ISEA2013: Electronic Art – Resistance is Futile

    ISEA2013: Electronic Art – Resistance is Futile

    Scott Rettberg - 02.06.2012 - 16:57

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