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  1. Elli Mylonas

    Elli Mylonas is the Director of the Center for Digital Scholarship in the Brown University Library, as well as being a subject liaison to several departments. Previously, she was the Senior Digital Humanities Librarian. Her work focuses on identifying, developing and implementing a variety of digital projects with Brown faculty, and providing DH outreach in the form of workshop series and consultations. In these overlapping roles, she has to discover productive collaborations between librarians in traditional roles and the emerging digital activities. Elli serves on the Technical Council of the Text Encoding Initiative and has been involved in Digital Humanities since her participation in the Perseus Project.  She is a graduate of Harvard University and did graduate work in Classics at Brown University.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.01.2011 - 11:52

  2. Patterns of Hypertext

    The apparent unruliness of contemporary hypertexts arises, in part, from our lack of a vocabulary to describe hypertext structures. From observation of a variety of actual hypertexts, we identify a variety of common structural patterns that may prove useful for description, analysis, and perhaps for design of complex hypertexts. These patterns include: Cycle Counterpoint Mirrorworld Tangle Sieve Montage Split/Join Missing Link Feint

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.01.2011 - 11:59

  3. Edward Falco

    Edward Falco

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.01.2011 - 12:05

  4. Stuart Moulthrop

    Born 1957 in Baltimore, Maryland, United States. Stuart Moulthrop is a writer, cybertext designer, and Professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. His early work, Victory Garden (1991), has been mentioned among the "golden age" of hypertext fiction. Later works, including Hegirascope (1995), Reagan Library (1999), and Under Language (2007), pertain more closely to our current age of artificial fibers. Moulthrop is the author of many essays on hypertext and digital culture, including some that have been multiply anthologized and translated.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.01.2011 - 12:14

  5. The End of Books

    Coover's "The End of Books" essay in the New York Times significantly introduced hypertext fiction to a wider literary audience. The essay describes that ways that hypertext poses challenges for writers and readers accustomed to coventional narrative forms, including assumptions about linearity, closure, and the division of agency between the writer and reader.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.01.2011 - 12:33

  6. Piecing Together and Tearing Apart: Finding the Story in afternoon

    This paper is a reading of a classic of hypertext narrative: Michael Joyce’s afternoon, a story. Several writers have discussed afternoon previously. However I have chosen to explore afternoon from a different angle by using theories of narratology, especially Genette. In this reading, I explore ways in which the text confuses the reader but also the many stabilising elements that aid the reader to piece together a story.

    NB: Published under author's unmarried name, Jill Walker.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.01.2011 - 12:40

  7. Patrick-Henri Burgaud

    Patrick-Henri Burgaud was born in 1947 in France. In 1992, he left education to devote all his time to artistic practice -- monumental poetry, land art, visual poetry -- his early work focuses on the visual impact of the alphabet, the word. In 1996 he began exploring the potential of data processing. Computer generated poetry and animated poetry opened up a new dimension in his work. Since then, as technology developed, his research has turned to programmed art, generative art, interactivity and net art. He was the artistic director or e-poetry2007 Paris.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 14.01.2011 - 16:58

  8. Renée Turner

    Renée Turner is an American artist and writer living in the Netherlands. In 2006 she was awarded a scholarship from the Institute of Creative Technology and received her MA in Creative Writing and New Media from De Montfort University. Since 1996 she has worked with Riek Sijbring and Femke Snelting under the collective name, De Geuzen: a foundation for multi-visual research. Their collaborative projects have showcased in Manifesta, Rhizome and Mute. Whether writing digital narratives or working collaboratively, Turner’s work often engages with feminist issues and online media ecologies. Currently she is teaching fine art and design at the Willem de Kooning Academy (Rotterdam) and St. Joost Art Academy (Breda).(Source: Author-submitted bio).

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 17.01.2011 - 14:32

  9. Chris Funkhouser

    Chris Funkhouser is an Associate Professor and Director of the Communication and Media program in the Department of Humanities at New Jersey Institute of Technology, where he teaches Cybertext, Digital Poetry, Electronic Literature, and other courses. He has also taught courses at Naropa University (Creative Cannibalism, 2007) and University of Pennsylvania (Digital Poetry, 2010), where he is also a Senior Editor at PennSound. He is a digital poet and author of the documentary study Prehistoric Digital Poetry: An Archaeology of Forms, 1959-1995, LambdaMOO_Sessions (Writer's Forum, 2006), and an e-book (CD-ROM), Selections 2.0, which was published by the Faculty of Creative Multimedia at Multimedia University (Malaysia), where he was a Visiting Fulbright Scholar in 2006.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 17.01.2011 - 16:08

  10. Daniel Apollon

    Daniel Apollon is an associate professor in digital culture at the University of Bergen. He has broad interests covering cultural and social perspectives on information technology, electronic text and edition, semantic web and the philosophy of networked knowledge society. Until 2008 Daniel Apollon headed the Research Group on Text Technologies at UNIFOB AKSIS AS, Bergen. Daniel has been involved as European coordinator in many EU projects on digital culture and electronic literature. He has also a long track record as academic expert for the European Commission, Agence Nationale de la Recherche, NFR, Unesco and the former European Rectors' Conference. He is also active in COST Actions on electronic edition and eContent projects. Daniel is also a film-maker with deep interest in ethnographic film-making and short film.

    (Source: Author's Description)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 17.01.2011 - 16:10

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