interoperability

By Ole Samdal, 25 November, 2019
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Abstract (in English)

At meetings in Siegen (2009), Sydney (2010), Provincetown ( 2010), Bleckinge (2010), Bergen (2011), and Morgantown (2011), the editors of the Electronic Literature Directory have established and developed a Consortium on Electronic Literature (CELL). The related database projects originating in each of these locations, is committed to the development of bibliographic standards, interoperability, and data-sharing to ensure the broad reach and wide range of literature and criticism that new media literary scholars are obligated to document and cultivate. In Paris this year, present members will meet to discuss the achievement of interoperability across our various platforms. First on our agenda, will be a report on progress toward the establishment of a "naming authority" for authors and works in the field of electronic literature, and we will continue towards our goal of institutionalizing basic bibliographic practices consistent with the emerging norms of the field.

By Hannah Ackermans, 7 December, 2018
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311-326
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Abstract (in English)

The inherent complexity of multimodal databases constitutes a challenge in terms of structuring and interoperability. However, it also stimulates the translation of organized data into enhanced and adaptable interfaces. Using the Digital Archive of Portuguese Experimental Literature (www.po-ex.net) as a framework, I will describe possible strategies for curating digital archives, through appropriation and remixing of database assets, allowing artistic and creative re-interpretations of experimental and electronic literature.

(source: abstract repository)

By Scott Rettberg, 12 February, 2013
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Year
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Abstract (in English)

Scott Rettberg (ELMCIP elmcip.net/) & Joe Tabbi (ELD directory.eliterature.org/) discuss how the acceleration of technology has influenced the stability of e-lit and discourse.

As directors of archives with extensive historical roots in the history of the ELO, both these individuals contribute formidably to the 'collective memory' of electronic literature. Preservation and re-construction of reader experience are problematic issues; preserving e-lit involves preserving the context and networks of discourse that envelop e-literature in an 'ecology'. Optimal success involves creating the conditions for project 'interoperability': linking conversations and structures that ensure continuity.

Neither Rettberg nor Tabbi, anticipated when they started that they would become become archivists, yet they now keep e-lit data from getting wet and/or disappearing.

(Source: David Jhave Johnston's description)

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Short description

This Consortium for Electronic Literature (CELL) workshop presents international projects that document, curate, and present research on electronic literature: born-digital literary forms such as hypertext fiction, kinetic poetry, interactive drama, location-based narrative, multimedia literary installations, and other types of poetic experiences made for the networked computer.

Since June of 2010, as part of the HERA-funded ELMCIP Project, the University of Bergen's Electronic Literature Research Group has been developing the ELMCIP Knowledge Base (http://elmcip.net/knowledgebase), a platform positioned to become one of the leading research tools in this area of the digital humanities.

The primary goal of the workshop is to bring together members of several international projects working on the documentation of electronic literature. Representives of projects from the United States, Canada, Portugal, Germany, Spain, Australia, and Norway will gather to pubicly present work on their projects, and to discuss how to best establish an international research infrastructure for the field.

Among the goals of the workshop will be the establishment of a standardized set of bibliographic fields used to describe works of electronic literature, and to work towards implementation of data-sharing arrangements between databases. Participants will include humanities researchers, research librarians, and digital-humanities developers, so that we can both conceptualize and begin implementing standards in all the databases concerned.

The workshop will include a public presentation of all of the projects represented; it will take place Monday, June 20th at the Bergen Public Library. These panels are open to the public, and interested researchers and librarians are particularly encouraged to attend.

Monday, June 20th -- Public events

Location: Bergen Public Library

9:30-11:30 Electronic Literature Databases and Archives

  Joseph Tabbi and Davin Heckman: the Electronic Literature Directory 

  Bertrand Gervais and Gabriel Tremblay-Gaudette: NT2

  Scott Rettberg and Eric Dean Rasmussen: the ELMCIP Knowledge Base 

  Rui Torres: Portuguese E-Lit Archive

 

13:00-14:30 Electronic Literature and the Digital Library

  John Vincler: US Library E-Lit Archive projects

  Thomas Brevik, Librarian and ELMCIP contributor

  Leif Magne Iversland, fungerende leder formedi på Universitetsbiblioteket i Bergen

 

14:45-16:30 Electronic Literature Databases and Archives

  Jörgen Schäfer: Media Upheavals, University of Siegen

  Claire Kwong: Writing Digital Media Collection of the Brown Digital Repository

  Anna Gibbs and Maria Angel: Creative Nation, Australian E-Lit Directory

This workshop is suppported by the University of Bergen (smådriftsmidler) and the Norwegian Research Council's VERDIKT program.

Record Status