Search

Search content of the knowledge base.

The search found 387 results in 0.018 seconds.

Search results

  1. Framing Locative Consciousness

    Francisco J. Ricardo analyzes the practices of layering narrative, image, and sound onto existing architecture and geography in locative art. Using many examples from the 20th and the beginning of the 21st century, he identifies an important conflict regarding aesthetic practices, their framings and conceptualizations; namely, the difference between “place” and “space.” Using this difference—i.e., the necessarily limited local conditions and the endless imagination intended in the architectural construction or installation—he shows us how and at what point a “locative narrative” emerges from the “locative consciousness”—or could emerge.

    (Source: Beyond the Screen, introduction by Jörgen Schäfer and Peter Gendolla)

    Scott Rettberg - 23.05.2011 - 15:45

  2. Locative Narrative, Literature and Form

    The essay addresses the theoretical background and artistic inspiration for the author's engagement with locative narrative. 

    Scott Rettberg - 23.05.2011 - 16:04

  3. The Global Poetic System: A System of Poetic Positioning

    Laura Borràs Castanyer and Juan B. Gutiérrez present the "Global Poetic System" and propose a framework for the design and application of locative media for literary projects.

    (Source: Beyond the Screen, introduction by Jörgen Schäfer and Peter Gendolla)

    Scott Rettberg - 24.05.2011 - 11:34

  4. How to Construct the Genre of Digital Poetry: A User Manual

    Friedrich W. Block looks at the systematic and historical conditions of the emergence of a genre like “digital poetry.” He argues that it has been necessary to communicate and spread schemes of invariance and identification to tie to- gether a high variety of artistic practice. For this purpose, concepts and names of genres have been connected with different forms of institutionalization. From this perspective, his essay considers the conceptual and cultural devel- opment of “digital poetry” as well as its relation to historical filiations and their transformation. In conclusion, his considerations lead to an abstract reflection of a more general concept of “poetry.”

    (Source: Beyond the Screen, introduction by Jörgen Schäfer and Peter Gendolla)

    Scott Rettberg - 24.05.2011 - 12:29

  5. The Reader, the Player and the Executable Poetics: Towards a Literature Beyond the Book

    Giselle Beiguelman underlines that it is essential to be aware of the historical continuities as well as of the discontinuities that materialize in electronic literature or art. This is particularly true in Brazil where multimedia poets combine videotext and video with their texts.The essay deals both with these historical continueties and more recent trends exhibited in a number of recent works of electronic literature.
    (Source: Beyond the Screen, introduction by Jörgen Schäfer and Peter Gendolla)

    Scott Rettberg - 24.05.2011 - 16:16

  6. Inner Workings: Code and Representations of Interiority in New Media Poetics

    'Inner Workings' addresses itself to the methods, properties and practices of writing systems, including human writing systems, whose very signifiers are programmed. What does programmed signification tell us about the inner human writing machine? John Cayley's essay participates in relevant metacritical and metapsychological discussions - reexamining Freud's Mystic Writing Pad in particular - and is specifically sited within the context of debates on code and codework in literal art. Rather than revealed interiority, code is the archive and guarantee of inner workings than reside beneath the complex surfaces of poetics in programmable media.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 27.05.2011 - 23:29

  7. Process Window: Code Work, Code Aesthetics, Code Poetics

    The Process Window contains general information about the state of the process, with a summary of its current threads and their states.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 27.05.2011 - 23:44

  8. Poetics of Dynamic Text

    Dynamic texts offer new possibilities for reading and new challenges in how we approach the reading object, forcing the final object away from the idea of a fixed form on a fixed surface. In order to "read" such an object, one must look deeper, into the code itself, and one must consider the various ramifications inherent in a code-based work. Ultimately, one must explore the edge where language apparatuses engage.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 28.05.2011 - 00:02

  9. Coding the Infome: Writing Abstract Reality

    Because of their specific history, we think of computer languages and code as symbolic abstractions of natural languages, and computers as universal machines manipulating these symbols. However, today every computer exists in relation to the Internet, whether it is connected or not. Every software is potentially a networked software, a building block of the networks we live within and through. Because of this, code is no longer Text, a symbolic representation of reality - it is reality. To write code is to create and manipulate this reality. Within it, artist-programmers are more land-artists than writers, software are more earthworks than narratives, this creates new and fascinating issues in terms of referentiallity and meaning for the coding artist to delve into.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 28.05.2011 - 00:14

  10. Adventures in Mot-Town

    In his State of the Arts keynote, Coover offered a tour of a number of contemporary works of electronic literature, in the style of an adventure story following our hero "Mot" -- the word -- as it wrestles through the multimediated world of graphic networked technologies.

    Scott Rettberg - 30.05.2011 - 16:17

Pages