Portuguese electronic literature

By Alvaro Seica, 16 September, 2014
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Abstract (in English)

The Portuguese Electronic Literature Collection (PELC) at the ELMCIP KB aims to address and collect the most relevant creative and critical works produced by Portuguese authors in the field of electronic literature during the past forty-five years. The collection also brings together authors, events, organizations, publishers, journals, publications, conferences, performances and exhibitions related to the Portuguese context.

Álvaro Seiça gave a lecture on June 25, 2014, at 3 pm, at the Room Ferreira Lima (6th floor, Faculty of Letters, University of Coimbra), entitled "A Luminous Beam: Reading the Portuguese Electronic Literature Collection." In this lecture Seiça presented the Portuguese Electronic Literature Collection that integrates the ELMCIP database (Electronic Literature as a Model of Creativity and Innovation in Practice, project coordinated by Scott Rettberg). This initiative was organized by the PhD program in Materialities of Literature (FCT Doctoral Program), in collaboration with the Digital Culture Program at the University of Bergen.

Description in original language
Abstract (in original language)

A Colecção de Literatura Electrónica Portuguesa, na base de dados ELMCIP, pretende abordar e recolher as obras criativas e teóricas mais relevantes produzidas por autores portugueses no campo da literatura electrónica, durante os últimos quarenta e cinco anos. A colecção agrega também autores, eventos, organizações, editoras, periódicos, publicações, conferências, performances, instalações e exposições que estejam relacionadas com o contexto português.

Álvaro Seiça fez uma palestra no dia 25 de junho de 2014, pelas 15h00, na Sala Ferreira Lima (6º piso, Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Coimbra), intitulada «Um Feixe Luminoso: Uma Leitura da Colecção de Literatura Electrónica Portuguesa». Nesta palestra foi apresentada a Colecção de Literatura Electrónica Portuguesa que integra a base de dados ELMCIP (Electronic Literature as a Model of Creativity and Innovation in Practice, projecto coordenado por Scott Rettberg). Esta iniciativa é uma organização do Programa de Doutoramento em Materialidades da Literatura (Programa Doutoral FCT), em colaboração com o Programa de Cultura Digital da Universidade de Bergen.

(Source: http://matlit.wordpress.com/2014/06/12/alvaro-seica-um-feixe-luminoso/)

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Remote video URL
By Scott Rettberg, 19 June, 2014
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This intervention presents an analysis of the Portuguese Electronic Literature Collection (PELC) I have been curating since August 2013 in the ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base. By aggregating and expanding existing records in the database and creating new ones, I have been developing a research collection that addresses the Portuguese creative and theoretical production since the 1960s in the broader field of electronic literature. The PELC uses resources from ELMCIP and PO.EX, the Digital Archive of Portuguese Experimental Literature, led by Rui Torres at the Fernando Pessoa University.
The standard format of a research collection within the ELMCIP KB enabled me not only to gather creative works and critical writing, but also other content types such as people, organizations, publishers (publishing houses and journals), databases and archives, and events (e.g. conferences, festivals, performances and exhibitions). As an extra media contribution, the collection contains a video interview to Manuel Portela and Rui Torres recorded during the ELO 2013 conference in Paris, bringing into question some of the important characteristics, influences and future directions of Portuguese E-Lit.
The Portuguese avant-garde from the past fifty years was marked by the PO.EX movement, a movement of experimental writers gathered around two main anthologies – Poesia Experimental 1 [Experimental Poetry] (1964) and 2 (1966) – exposing concrete poetry, conceptual literature, sound poetry, “object-poetry,” performances and happenings. From the 1960s until the late 80s, this heterogeneous movement increased and expanded the notion of media experimentation, from videopoetry to computer-generated literature, computer poetry and infopoetry. In this sense, E.M. de Melo e Castro’s videopoem Roda Lume (1968) is a pioneer example of combined text, sound and moving image, forerunning the WWW’s hypermedia poems. In the 1980s, besides his theoretical production, Melo e Castro developed a series of electronic videopoems called Signagens (1985-89) and gave rise to infopoetry (1979-onwards). In the same period, Silvestre Pestana developed his Computer Poetry series (1981-83), programming three visual animated poems in a Spectrum. However, it was Pedro Barbosa who introduced computer-generated literature in Portugal with two theoretical volumes of cybernetic literature, A Literatura Cibernética 1 (1977) and 2 (1980), which also contained a selection of the output texts (poetry and fiction) generated in a mainframe computer with FORTRAN and BASIC languages. Moreover, Barbosa created the text generator “Sintext” (1992-99), published various monographs such as A Ciberliteratura: Criação Literária e Computador (1996) and launched the electronic opera AlletSator (2001). Since the WWW, the panorama of Portuguese e-lit has been growing, mainly through the activity of Antero de Alda, Manuel Portela and Rui Torres. Torres has been creating several digital poems remixing appropriated literary databases and directing the journal Cibertextualidades.
My analysis of the PELC is therefore based on previous critical writing and reads Portuguese creative works using light not only as a poetic unifier element in the dematerialization of word and image in electronic media, but also as the symbolic beam of a corpus that ought to expand our horizon.

(Source: Author's Abstract)

Critical Writing referenced
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This course will provide an introduction to genres of cultural artifacts particular to the network and the computer, specifically computer and network art, electronic literature, and computer games. Traditional conceptions of genre and categories of cultural artifact, such as art object, performance, novel, poem, and game are undergoing redefinition in the context of digital culture, and new genres of cultural artifacts are emerging, which require new models of textual analysis specific to the computational media and network context in which these artifacts are produced and distributed. DIKULT103 provides an overview of these emerging genres, and an introduction to the models of academic discourse and analysis particular to them. Students in the course will learn to analyze contemporary digital artifacts on a textual and structural basis, within the general framework of genre studies.

Critical Writing Referenced
By Alvaro Seica, 18 October, 2013
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CC Attribution Non-Commercial
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Abstract (in English)

Álvaro Seiça interviews Manuel Portela and Rui Torres on the Portuguese Electronic Literature Collection at ELMCIP.net. The conversation brings into question some of the important characteristics, influences and future directions of Portuguese E-Lit.

For more info: http://elmcip.net/research-collection/portuguese-electronic-literature-…

Video recorded on September 26, 2013, during the ELO 2013 conference "Chercher le Texte" at the ENSAD, Paris.

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Remote video URL
By Alvaro Seica, 27 August, 2013
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978-1-938228-74-2
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All Rights reserved
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Approved by librarian
Abstract (in English)

Po.Ex: Essays from Portugal on Cyberliterature and Intermedia is a crucial addition to the bookshelf for scholars and students of new media, digital literature, and experimental writing. Available for the first time in English, these essays are crucial primary texts of experimental literature. Po.Ex shows a long history of procedural composition and expressive intermedial writing, leading directly to the latest computer and network-based artworks. Collecting essays by Pedro Barbosa, Ana Hatherly, and E.M. de Melo e Castro, along with framing essays by the editors and extensive bibliographical materials, this book situates today’s digital and online texts in a rich tradition of European literature. New forms of writing appear in the encounter of literature and digital media, just as old forms are renewed. Po.Ex is an archive of the past, present, and future of cyberliterature and intermedia writing.

By Audun Andreassen, 14 March, 2013
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This paper aims at analyzing the historical evolution of poetry experiments in Italian and Portuguese languages. Poetry has always been interested in experimenting with new ways of writing; however the computer and internet media make the experiments with the language a basic question. The first part of this paper will refer to a historical approach tracing the most important breakpoints in the poetry development in Italian and Portuguese languages during the last century. We will focus above all on Italian Futurism and visual poetry and we will connect Italian visual poetry tradition to Brazilian concrete poetry to identify the main characteristics and to define the links between these movements and the contemporaneous epoetry environment. In the second part some Italian Portuguese e-poetries will be presented and analyzed. A close-reading of some famous works will be proposed trying to identify the strategic elements which constitute the poetics of digital text - the infographic images, the poeticity of the elements, theirs [il]legibility, the pluri-signification of the relation image. The third part will allow us to observe if there are some distinctiveness in Italian and Portuguese works due to historical reasons and traditions.

(Source: Author's abstract for ELO_AI).