Search

Search content of the knowledge base.

The search found 141 results in 0.018 seconds.

Search results

  1. Poesin banar ny väg bland ettor och nollor

    Poesin banar ny väg bland ettor och nollor

    Patricia Tomaszek - 05.09.2012 - 20:05

  2. Aya Karpinska and Daniel C. Howe

    This case study was originally prepared for, but does not appear in, New Directions in Digital Poetry (New York: Continuum, 2012); see http://newdirectionsindigitalpoetry.net

    Source: footnote 2 to the article

    Patricia Tomaszek - 06.09.2012 - 22:54

  3. Cybertext Poetics: The Critical Landscape of New Media Literary Theory, A Review

    Cybertext Poetics: The Critical Landscape of New Media Literary Theory, A Review

    Patricia Tomaszek - 09.09.2012 - 22:21

  4. E-Borges: Stuart Moulthrop’s Victory Garden

    This essay analyses Stuart Moulthrop’s Victory Garden (1991), a singular hyperfiction within the context of hypertextual narratives released during the 90s. Taking into consideration the campus novel and anti-war novel themes, I focus my reading on the technological mediation of war and the intertextualization of Jorge Luis Borges’ short story “El Jardín de Senderos que se Bifurcan” (1941). Therefore, I argue that Victory Garden is an appropriation and recreation, via a digital medium, of several Borgesian motifs and his beloved metaliterary theme: the labyrinth.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 24.09.2012 - 11:24

  5. The Challenge of Cybertext: Teaching Literature in the Digital World

    This article discusses the changing role of literature in the contemporary media landscape. Literary scholarship may well maintain its importance in the digitalizing world, but this requires it to engage in an open dialogue with cultural and media studies. It is important that more attention is paid to contemporary literature as well as to new media offering significant pedagogical possibilities, which should be better acknowledged. The article's main focus is on the emerging field of digital literature. Cybertextuality, especially, is fundamentally changing our notions of the integrity of a literary work, reading, writing and interpretation. I attempt to describe and put into context one sample case of cybertextuality, The Impermanence Agent by Noah Wardrip-Fruin et al. Finally, I discuss some of the practical problems faced by teachers who introduce digital literature in their classrooms.

    (Source: Author's abstract)

    Reprinted in Online Learning Vol 2: Digital Pedagogies (Sage, New York, 2011)

    Patricia Tomaszek - 09.10.2012 - 15:28

  6. Weapons Of The Deconstructive Masses: Whatever the Electronic in Electronic Literature may or may not mean

    This piece is an attempt to hasten the death of the 'electronic' in 'electronic literature' — to re-cognize it as a dead metaphor — as the prelude to an agonistic meditation on my generation's anticipation of the death of literature itself, with 'the literary,' potentially, waiting in the wings (and published elsewhere, elsewhen, elsehow).

    (Source: Author's abstract)

    Respondents at 2008 ELO Conference

    Joe Tabbi
    University of Illinois Chicago, USA 

    Scott Rettberg
    University of Bergen, Norway 

    Stuart Moulthrop
    University of Baltimore, USA

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 09.10.2012 - 21:00

  7. The E-ssense of Literature

    Many works of electronic literature use text generation algorithms or interactive interfaces to present the reader with a different text upon each reading. Such variable texts can be difficult to analyze and discuss because it can be prohibitively difficult to take into account all possible permutations. The standard critical methodology for approaching these texts is to discuss excerpts from different readings, perhaps comparing passages that involve alternative renderings of the same textual content. While this approach can convey a general sense of the work and its possibilities for variation, it usually doesn't allow a thorough treatment of a complex work's structural framework. This essay presents a method for analyzing a work's source code to define the most important constant and variable properties of its constituent elements. It then applies the method to a generated electronic poem, "Snaps," by Dirk Hine. The source structure thus defined provides a springboard for critical interpretation of the work.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 09.10.2012 - 21:12

  8. Generative Visual Renku: Poetic Multimedia Semantics with the GRIOT System

    A polymorphic poem (polypoem) is a generative digital artwork that is constructed differently upon each instantiation, but can be meaningfully constrained according to aspects such as theme, metaphor, affect, and discourse structure. The Generative Visual Renku project presents a new form of concrete polymorphic poetry inspired by Japanese renku poetry, iconicity of Chinese character forms, and generative models from contemporary art. Calligraphic iconic illustrations are conjoined by the GRIOT system into a fanciful topography articulating the nuanced interplay between organic (natural or hand-created) and modular (mass-produced or consumerist) artifacts that saturate our lives. GRIOT, which is a system for composing generative and interactive narrative and poetic works, is used to semantically constrain generated output both visually and conceptually. On the one hand, this project extends the GRIOT architecture's support for composing graphics and has resulted in new theory to provide cognitive and semiotic groundings for the extension.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 09.10.2012 - 21:20

  9. The Aesthetics of Generative Literature: Lessons from a Digital Writing Workshop

    This paper explores a range of issues related to the pedagogy and practice of generative writing in programmable media. We begin with a brief description of the RiTa toolkit – a set of computational tools designed to facilitate the practice of generative writing. We then describe our experiences using these tools in a series of digital writing workshops at Brown University in 2007-2008. We discuss and theoretically examine a set of core issues raised by workshop participants — distributed authorship, the aesthetics of surprise, materiality, push-back, layering, and others — and attempt to situate them within the larger discourse of generative art and writing practice.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 09.10.2012 - 21:23

  10. Electronic Literature as an Information System

    Electronic literature is a term that encompasses artistic texts produced for printed media which are consumed in electronic format, as well as text produced for electronic media that could not be printed without losing essential qualities. Some have argued that the essence of electronic literature is the use of multimedia, fragmentation, and/or non-linearity. Others focus on the role of computation and complex processing. "Cybertext" does not sufficiently describe these systems. In this paper we propose that works of electronic literature, understood as text (with possible inclusion of multimedia elements) designed to be consumed in bi- or multi-directional electronic media, are best understood as 3-tier (or n-tier) information systems. These tiers include data (the textual content), process (computational interactions) and presentation (on-screen rendering of the narrative). The interaction between these layers produces what is known as the work of electronic literature.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 09.10.2012 - 21:30

Pages