mourning

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An audio piece about online memorials.  The voice on the recording is somewhat high-pitched and sped-up, like the exaggerated whine of a self-indulgent preteen girl. As we listen to the voice reading, we realize that it is reciting a list of comments attached to a YouTube video tribute to a young girl who has been murdered. The recording is simultaneously hilarious and disturbing, filled with talk of Angels and “virtual ashes spread across the Web.” Comments like “I miss her. She’s so beautiful in the pics. Who was she?” highlight the absurd and largely shallow nature of death as filtered by the Web, at the same time as the piece somewhat uncomfortably reminds us, even as we laugh at it, that we are part of the same circus too. Caught up in our everyday use of internet-­‐based communication technologies, we may tend to be blind to political and social ramifications that our uses of technology entail. A kind of flattening takes place when discourse transpires on the Web. Activities that we might under normal circumstances consider personal or private, such as mourning, become just another form of information. Relationships likewise become abstracted from everyday reality. Just as “facebook friends” are another class of relation than “real-­‐world friends,” so too mourning becomes another, public class of activity, such that it is possible both to sincerely grieve the passing of a girl you don’t know and to parody the fact that grief loses its power when it becomes just another class of information. 

(Source: Scott Rettberg "Words to light up a dark room: Electronic Literature")  

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Sound workduration: 6min 12sec Requirements: Latest Quicktime plug-in, headphones or speakersBrowsers: Firefox, Opera, Safari and Explorer

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Description (in English)

A kinetic poem reflecting on the death of the author's father that uses the car wash as a metaphor for passing between worlds.

I ♥ E-Poetry entry
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Description (in English)

"Planting Trees out of the Grief" is a lyrical essay, or work of creative non-fiction about mourning. "Planting Trees out of the Grief. In Memoriam Robert Creeley" is a ficticious story that mirrors the psychological processes of coping with mourning described in the essay.

The hypertext will lead you through both texts as same as one goes through the process of mourning. You will go further and sometimes you realize you just stepped backwards finding yourself at the same point you were once before.

Being at the same point (textpassage) you were once before you'll have the choice to follow new paths - or you have to go through the same until a new path (link) reveals. Sometimes people forget they were in grief and then, suddenly, they face their loss again. Therefore, I am dealing with intendend moments of recurrence. By this, you are forced to find new paths and follow other links.

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