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  1. Christine Wilks

    Christine Wilks is a digital writer, artist, practice-based researcher and developer of interactive narratives and playable media. Her digital fiction, Underbelly, won the New Media Writing Prize 2010 and the MaMSIE Digital Media Competition 2011. Her work is published in online journals, exhibitions and anthologies, including the 'Electronic Literature Collection, Volume 2' and the ‘ELMCIP Anthology of European Electronic Literature’, and has been presented internationally at festivals, exhibitions and conferences. From 2007 to 2013 she was a core member of the digital arts remixing collective, R3M1XW0RX, and contributed over 100 remixes. Before working in digital media and the web, she made short films, videos, animations, installations and wrote fiction and screenplays. She has an MA in Fine Art from Cardiff Institute of Higher Education (UWIC), an MA(Hons) in Creative Writing and New Media from De Montfort University and a PhD in Digital Writing from Bath Spa University.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 18.02.2011 - 19:32

  2. David Ciccoricco

    David (also published as Dave) is a member of the English Department faculty at the University of Otago, located in Dunedin, New Zealand. His research is focused on contemporary narrative fiction, with a particular emphasis on emergent forms of digital literature and digital culture in general. He is the author of Reading Network Fiction (U of Alabama Press), a book on the first and second waves of digital fiction. He is the co-editor of ebr or the Electronic Book Review.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 18.02.2011 - 20:17

  3. Timothy Morton

    Timothy Morton is Professor of Literature and the Environment at the University of California, Davis. He is the author of Realist Magic (OHP, fothcoming) The Ecological Thought (Harvard UP, 2010) and Ecology without Nature (Harvard UP, 2007), and over seventy essays on literature, philosophy, ecology, music, art and food. Morton serves as a member of the editorial board of ebr, the Electronic Book Review.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 18.02.2011 - 21:59

  4. Astrid Ensslin

    Astrid Ensslin is Professor in Digital Culture at the University of Bergen. Her main publications include Pre-web Digital Publishing and the Lore of Electronic Literature (CUP, 2022), Digital Fiction and the Unnatural (Ohio State UP, 2021, with Alice Bell), Approaches to Videogame Discourse (Bloomsbury, 2019, co-edited with Isabel Balteiro), Small Screen Fictions (Paradoxa, 2017, co-edited with Lisa Swanstrom and Pawel Frelik) Literary Gaming (MIT Press, 2014), Analyzing Digital Fiction (co-edited with Alice Bell and Hans Kri

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 18.02.2011 - 22:25

  5. Dene Grigar

    Dene Grigar is Professor and Director of The Creative Media & Digital Culture Program at Washington State University Vancouver whose research focuses on the creation, curation, preservation, and criticism of Electronic Literature, specifically building multimedial environments and experiences for live performance, installations, and curated spaces; desktop computers; and mobile media devices. She has authored 14 media works such as “Curlew” (2014), “A Villager’s Tale” (2011), the “24-Hour Micro E-Lit Project” (2009), “When Ghosts Will Die” (2008), and “Fallow Field: A Story in Two Parts" (2005), as well as 54 scholarly articles adn three books. She also curates exhibits of electronic literature and media art, mounting shows at the British Computer Society and the Library of Congress and for the Symposium on Electronic Art (ISEA) and the Modern Language Association (MLA), among other venues.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 22.02.2011 - 16:59

  6. D. Fox Harrell

    D. Fox Harrell is an associate professor of digital media at MIT. The National Science Foundation has recognized him with a CAREER Award for his project "Computing for Advanced Identity Representation." He is currently completing a book, Phantasmal Media: An Approach to Imagination, Computation, and Expression, for the MIT Press.

    Also published under name Douglas Alan Harrell.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 22.02.2011 - 17:42

  7. Davin Heckman

    Davin Heckman is the author of A Small World: Smart Houses and the Dream of the Perfect Day (Duke UP, 2008). He is Supervising Editor of the Electronic Literature Directory (directory.eliterature.org), Managing Editor of electronic book review and Professor of Mass Communication at Winona State University. During the 2011-2012 academic year, Davin was a Fulbright Scholar in Digital Culture at the University of Bergen.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 22.02.2011 - 18:51

  8. Susana Pajares Tosca

    Spanish researcher who has worked at the IT University of Copenhagen since 2001. Her early work and her PhD was on hypertext literature, while later work has focused on computer games and online communication more generally.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 23.02.2011 - 20:52

  9. Jim Andrews

    Jim Andrews is a net artist, poet, programmer, visual and audio artist, mathematician and essayist. He has been publishing vispo.com since 1996. He completed a degree in English and Mathematics at the U of Victoria in Canada in 1983. He then produced a literary radio show called Fine Lines and, later, ?FRAME? for six years that he distributed each week to 15 campus/community stations in Canada.

    Encountering the radio art and theoretical writing of Gregory Whitehead and the other 'audio writers', together with the work of McLuhan and a kind of mentorship from Seattle's Joe Keppler and margareta waterman, showed him the importance of understanding one's medium, understanding the artistic possibilities of the specific properties of one's media/um.

    After producing the radio show, he went back to school and studied Computer Science and Mathematics. After that, it wasn't long before the web emerged, which Andrews saw as the perfect media/um for someone seeking to combine writing, programming, visual and audio art in an international scene of epistolary correspondence about the art and poetics and sharing online of the art itself.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 24.02.2011 - 11:12

  10. Geniwate

    Geniwate is the artist name of Jenny Weight, Australian artist and scholar. She publishes critical works as Jenny Weight.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 24.02.2011 - 19:09

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