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  1. N. Katherine Hayles

    Katherine Hayles is Distinguished Professor of English and media studies at the University of California, Los Angeles. Her research interests concern topics related to literature and science in the 20th and 21st century; 20th and 21st century American fiction; electronic textuality, hypertext fiction and theory; science fiction; literary theory; and media theory. With degrees in both chemistry and English literature, Hayles is one of the foremost scholars of the relationship between literature and science in the late twentieth century. She is the author six books, including How We Became Posthuman: Virtual Bodies in Cybernetics, Literature and Informatics (1999), which won the Rene Wellek Prize for the Best Book in Literary Theory for 1998-1999; and Writing Machines (2001), which won the Suzanne Langer Award for Outstanding Scholarship. Her most recent book is Electronic Literature: New Horizons for the Literary (2007).

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 31.01.2011 - 12:55

  2. Romy Achituv

    Romy Achituv is an experimental interdisciplinary artist whose work engages issues of representation, language, time, and memory. Underlying his practice is an ongoing interest in the language of visual representation and in dynamics of spectatorship and interaction. His projects often employ the language and formal attributes of his media to fabricate structural and visual metaphors. His work in new media has focused on digital expressions of time and space, experiments in nonlinear cinematic narrative, and the exploration of non‐linear linguistic structures. In recent years he has developed a particular interest in projects that explore the manifestation of digitally inspired paradigms in physical environments. Romy Achituv’s work has been widely exhibited and has been acquired by major international public and private collections. He is a member of the International Academy for Digital Arts and Sciences, and a founding member of ARTEAM Interdisciplinary Art, a non‐for‐profit art collective based in Israel.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 31.01.2011 - 13:31

  3. Alice Bell

    My research interests are digital literature, narrative theory and stylistics. My monograph, The Possible Worlds of Hypertext Fiction, develops and supplements Possible Worlds Theory for its application to hypertext fiction. The text includes analyses of four canonical hypertext fiction works and also offers a theoretical evaluation of Possible Worlds Theory. In my current work, I am developing a number of other narratological and literary linguistic frameworks for the analysis of digital fiction including cognitive poetic and unnatural narratological approaches. I am the principal investigator of the Digital Fiction International Network (funded by The Leverhulme Trust Jan 2009 - Jan 2010). The network provides an arena for a new generation of scholars to collaborate on integral theoretical and analytical issues within digital fiction research.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 01.02.2011 - 10:31

  4. Juliet Ann Martin

    Juliet Ann Martin has a BA in Visual Arts from Brown University and an MFA in Computer Art at the School of Visual Arts. She is a painter, performer, writer, digital artist, and programmer. She has received recognition for the computer work she has done from the Cooper Hewitt, the DNP Achievement Awards, the European Media Arts Festival, the Year Zero One Gallery, Rhizome Contentbase, Macxibition, David Siegels High Five, Paper Magazine, and Wired Magazine. Her short stories have been published in CUPS Magazine and Black Ice Literary Journal. (Source: http://www.studioxx.org/en/juliet-ann-martin)

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 02.02.2011 - 22:43

  5. John McDaid

    John McDaid, author of Uncle Buddy's Phantom Funhouse, is an award-winning science fiction writer, folk/filk singer-songwriter, freelance journalist, and media ecologist from Brooklyn, NY.

    He attended the Clarion Science Fiction Workshop in 1993, and sold his first short story, the Sturgeon Award-winning "Jigoku no mokushiroku"to Asimov's in 1995. His 1993 digital novel, Uncle Buddy’s Phantom Funhouse, included two audio tapes, which Robert Coover's New York Times review called the work of “A mischievous guitarist and vocalist with a gift for the inimitable phrase."

    With Michael Joyce, Nancy Kaplan, and Stuart Moulthrop, he is a co-founder of the TINAC collective, a group of writers and theorists of hypertext. He helped create one of the first hypertext writing programs (within Expository Writing) at New York University in 1988 where he served as Coordinator of Computer Composition.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 07.02.2011 - 12:46

  6. Luc Dall Armellina

    Luc Dall'Armellina is a writer, designer of digital devices and lecturer in arts & information and communication sciences, member of EMA Laboratory [Cergy-Pontoise University], associated member of Paragraphe Laboratory [ Paris 8 University ].

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 09.02.2011 - 12:20

  7. Grégory Chatonsky

    author-submitted bio: * Grégory Chatonsky est un artiste né à Paris. Il travaille entre Montréal et Paris. Grégory Chatonsky a étudié la philosophie à l'université de la Sorbonne et le multimédia aux Beaux-arts de Paris. Il a pris part à de nombreux projets solo et collectifs en France, Canada, Etats-Unis, Italie, Australie, Allemagne, Finlande, Espagne. Ses oeuvres ont été acquises par des institutions telles que la Maison européenne de la photograhie. Parallèlement, Grégory Chatonsky a fondé en 1994 un collectif de netartistes incident.net et a réalisé de nombreuses commmandes: site Internet du centre Pompidou et de la Villa Médicis, identité visuelle du MAC/VAL, fiction interactive pour Arte. Il a enseigné au Fresnoy en 2003-04 ainsi qu'à l'école des arts visuels et médiatiques de l'UQAM depuis 2006. Le travail de Chatonsky, tant par des installations interactives, des dispositifs en réseau et urbain, des photographies que des sculptures, interroge notre relation affective aux technologies, met en scène les flux dont notre époque est tissée pour créer de nouvelles formes de fiction. * Gregory Chatonsky is an artist born in Paris. He currently resides in Montreal and Paris.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 09.02.2011 - 14:06

  8. Robert Kendall

    Robert Kendall has been creating interactive multimedia poetry since 1990, making him one of the earliest practitioners of the form. He is the author of a book-length hypertext poem, A Life Set for Two (Eastgate Systems, 1996). His hypertext poetry has also appeared on disk in The Little Magazine and Version Box and is forthcoming in the anthology Behind the Lines (Eastgate). It has appeared on the Web at Iowa Review Web, BBC Online, Eastgate Hypertext Reading Room, Cauldron & Net, and Cortland Review. A Wandering City (Cleveland State University Poetry Center, 1992), his printed book of poems, won the CSU Poetry Center Prize. Kendall's printed poetry has appeared widely in magazines (including Rattapallax, Contact II, River Styx, New York Quarterly, Barrow Street, and Indiana Review), and several anthologies have included his work. He has received a New Jersey State Council on the Arts Fellowship for literature and a New Forms Regional Grant Program Award.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 10.02.2011 - 14:00

  9. Andy Campbell

    Andy Campbell is the Digital Director of UK-based arts/media charity One to One Development Trust and the founder/lead writer for Dreaming Methods, One to One’s award-winning in-house digital storytelling development studio. With over 20 years’ experience as a digital artist, writer and programmer, his recent work includes the collaborative narrative game All the Delicate Duplicates which won The Space Open Call competition, the Tumblr International Prize for Digital Art, Best Overall Game at the UK’s GameCity Festival and Best Experimental Game at the Dundee Games Design Awards; and WALLPAPER with writer/film-maker Judi Alston, an immersive game/installation supported by Arts Council England and Sheffield Hallam University with a VR adaptation funded by Creative England. He is the lead developer of Inanimate Alice, an episodic work of digital fiction for young adults used in multilingual education worldwide.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 10.02.2011 - 18:09

  10. Young-Hae Chang Heavy Industries

    Young-Hae Chang Heavy Industries is an art-duo based in Seoul. The members are Young-Hae Chang and Marc Voge and they call themselves web-artists. The group was founded in 1999 and has been working with web-art since then. The name Young-Hae Chang Heavy Industries was chosen because, as the duo puts it, ''We live in a country -- South Korea -- that loves its big, powerful companies. We wanted to get some of that love.'' Following this logic, the artists have executive titles: Young-Hae Chang as the CEO and Marc Voge as the CIO. See also Young-Hae Chang and Marc Voge.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 12.02.2011 - 18:33

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