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  1. Narrative Structure and Creative Tension in Call of Cthulhu

    Kenneth Hite argues that the long-running, H.P. Lovecraft-inspired Call of Cthulhu franchise differs from traditional tabletop role-playing in its focus on suspense rather than character growth. Hite’s analysis suggests that in its origins and emphasis on narrative structure Cthulhu is a highly literary game.

    Andre Lund - 13.10.2017 - 11:24

  2. Mirrors and Shadows: The Aestheticisation of Oneself

    Mirrors and Shadows: The Aestheticisation of Oneself

    Davin Heckman - 27.04.2018 - 15:19

  3. Bass Resonance

    1999 e-literature award winner John Cayley writes about Saul Bass of classic film title fame. A precursor to language arts innovators Jenny Holzer, Richard Kostelanetz, and Cayley himself, Bass may now be recognized as a poet in his own 'write,' important for a new generation of designwriters creating "graphic bodies of language," moving words and signifying images, in digital environments.

    (Source: Author)

    Ana Castello - 15.10.2018 - 22:40

  4. Weblog

    This is the definition of “weblog” I’ve written for the Routledge Encyclopedia of Narrative Theory, which is forthcoming in 2005. It’s limited in size and scope: I had to keep to a maximum of 500 words, including the references, and I wrote it for an encyclopedia of narrative. The asterixes indicate cross references to other entries in the encyclopedia.

    (Source: Author)

    Ana Castello - 16.10.2018 - 18:27

  5. Community of People with No Time

    "Collaboration shifts": Victoria Vesna investigates the digital/physical limn, the compression of spacetime, and the condition of tensegrity in projects such as n0time and Datamining Bodies.

    (Source: Electronic Book Review)

    Daniel Venge Bagge - 20.09.2019 - 19:57

  6. Thomas Pynchon

    Thomas Pynchon

    Yvanne Michéle Louise Kerignard - 23.09.2019 - 22:28

  7. The Democratic Genre: Fan Fiction in a Literary Context

    Fanfic is the fastest-growing form of writing in the world. Working in ‘fandoms’ anonymous authors bring their own gloss and invention to novels, films and tv series, developing characters, expanding narratives and, in the ‘slash’ genre, boldly going where the conventional genre writers fear to tread in relationships.

    In ’The Democratic Genre’ poet Sheenagh Pugh explores fandoms as diverse as Jane Austen, Blake’s 7 and The Bill. She discusses fanfic terminology, its mechanisms for participation and support, the differences with conventional publishing and, for the first time, the literary standing of the writing.

    (source: seren.com)

    Caroline Tranberg - 23.09.2021 - 10:50

  8. Paper Machine

    In this book, Jacques Derrida questions the transition from paper to the virtual. He looks at the processes that take place between the paper and the machine inscribing it. This inclueds archivization, writing machines, and the mechanicity inherent in language and the media. Derrida theorizes what becomes of the archive when the world of paper is subsumed in new machines for virtualization, and whether there can be a virtual event or a virtual archive.
     

    Ashleigh Steele - 24.09.2021 - 13:34

  9. Understanding and Communicating Social Informatics: A Framework for Studying and Teaching the Human Context of Information and Communication Technologies

    Here is a sustained investigation into the human contexts of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs), covering both research and theory in this emerging field. Authors Kling, Rosenbaum, and Sawyer demonstrate that the design, adoption, and use of ICTs are deeply connected to people's actions as well as to the environments in which they are used. In Chapters One and Two, they define Social Informatics and offer a pragmatic overview of the discipline. In Chapters Three and Four, they articulate its fundamental ideas for specific audiences and present important research findings about the personal, social, and organizational consequences of ICT design and use. Chapter Five covers Social Informatics education; Chapter Six discusses ways to communicate Social Informatics to professional and research communities; and Chapter Seven provides a summary and look to the future.

    Ole Kristian Sæther Skoge - 01.10.2021 - 15:48

  10. At Home on the Screen: Kinetics and Codeworks

    A short close reading of Duc Thuan's poem Days of JavaMoon

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 23.04.2024 - 09:17

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