Published on the Web (online journal)

I ♥ E-Poetry entry
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Technical notes

To hear the sound, turn on the computer's speakers or plug in headphones. The two versions of Dreamaphage are read in different ways. Version one: Click and drag to move forward and backward along the tunnel, clicking on texts and elements to explore them further. When a text has been selected, click and drag the upturned page corners to turn the pages of the book. Clicking on the red words within the books will open new windows to reveal additional aspects of Dreamaphage. Version two: Click the names of the viruses running along the bottom of the piece to open a report concerning that virus. Click and drag the upturned page corners to turn the pages of the book. Clicking on the red words within the books will open new windows to reveal additional aspects of Dreamaphage.

Description (in English)

Deviant: The Possession of Christian Shaw is an animated interactive graphic based on the historical story of Christian Shaw and her demonic possession. Set in 1696 amongst the witch trials, this project explores new ways of experiencing a story — harnessing the allure of mystery and uneasy tensions and plucking the participant's sense of social responsibility. (Source: Author description, Electronic Literature Collection, Vol. One.)

It’s a visual game and almost non-textual. You play by clicking on the active areas. It’s not always easy to see the areas so you need to click around and just try for a while. There are sounds when you click on different areas. The game takes place in something looking like a small town, and smaller images pops up when you click on items.

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Technical notes

To hear the sound, turn on the computer's speakers or plug in headphones. Move the mouse over and click active areas to interact with the environment.

Description (in English)

The poem combines aspects of love, death, and nature in one piece. Originally it consisted of three parts: text, photography, and sound. In the Flash version these parts are arranged in a loop completed by a minimalist interface (to pause).
(Source: author description from ELC Vol. 1)

I ♥ E-Poetry entry
Pull Quotes

cursed be the god that brings so much death and beauty

the day i die she will rise up

the day i die she will sleep

to see this or this or this, i must record everything/ before my father is gone, before i am gone

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Technical notes

To hear the sound, turn on the computer's speakers or plug in headphones. The piece can be paused by moving the mouse over the pause symbol at the bottom.

Contributors note

text, photography, sound: Alan Sondheim; composed by Reiner Strasser, Spt. 2005

Description (in English)

wotclock is a QuickTime "speaking clock." This clock was originally developed for the TechnoPoetry Festival curated by Stephanie Strickland at the Georgia Institute of Technology in April 2002. It is based on material from What We Will, a broadband interactive drama produced by Giles Perring, Douglas Cape, myself, and others from 2001 on. The underlying concepts and algorithms are derived from a series of "speaking clocks" that I made in HyperCard from 1995 on. It should be stressed that the clock showcases Douglas Cape's superb panoramic photography for What We Will.

(Source: Author description).

I ♥ E-Poetry entry
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Technical notes

After loading, wotclock runs continually as a time-piece. The numerals that traditionally circle the clock face are replaced by letters, and these letters are used to construct phrases in the center that tell the time. The first two words tell the hour, while the second two tell the minute, the seconds being counted on the clock face itself. On the minute, a new photograph from What We Will is displayed. Clicking and dragging the upper pane or lower pane rotates the panorama.

Contributors note

with photographs and additional production by Douglas Cape

Description (in English)

On one level, Cruising is an excited oral recitation of a teenager's favorite pastime in small town Wisconsin, racing up and down the main drag of Main Street looking to make connections, wanting love. But by merging the linear aspect of the sound recording with an interactive component that demands a degree of control, Cruising reinforces the spatial and temporal themes of the poem by requiring the user to learn how to “drive” the text. A new user must first struggle with gaining control of the speed, the direction, and the scale in order to follow the textual path of the narrative. When the text on the screen and the spoken words are made to coincide, the rush of the image sequence is reduced to a slow ongoing loop of still frames. The viewer moves between reading text and experiencing a filmic flow of images — but cannot exactly have both at the same time. In this way, the work seeks to highlight the materiality of text, film, and interface.

(Souce: Authors' description from Electronic Literature Collection, Volume One)

I ♥ E-Poetry entry
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Technical notes

Flash. To hear the sound, turn on the computer's speakers or plug in headphones. Move the cursor up and down to control the size of the piece, left and right to control the scrolling speed of the text and images.

Description (in English)

10:01 is the complementary and complimentary hypermedia version of Olsen's avant-pop novel 10:01 (Chiasmus, 2005) about what goes through the minds of the audience in an AMC theater at the Mall of America ten minutes and one second before the feature film commences.

(Source: Author's description from Electronic Literature Collection, Volume One.)

Pull Quotes

He secretly scans them for instants during which tourists photograph each other. Or not precisely those, but rather the ones immediately following, when people slowly stopp smiling after the shot has been snapped and you can actually see their public masks soften and melt back into everyday blandness, a gesture almost always accompanied by a slight lowering of the head in a miniature act of capitulation.

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Technical notes

To hear the sound, turn on the computer's speakers or plug in headphones. After the introduction, click the question mark for an overview of the interface. Guthrie's read me file provides details on running 10:01 and accessing external links.

Description (in English)

WhereAbouts is an interactive poem about urban life. It juxtaposes planning and order with movement and chaos. The neatly planned and perfectly ordered design of poetry in the form of short verses gives way to the busy ant-like rush of letters in the changing streets designed by the reader, as she drags around the "example" blocks as she pleases. The planned and recognizable city now disappears, and another city emerges, one composed of the bustle of the letters that inhabit it, even as they hurry to leave the screen.

(Source: Author's description from Electronic Literature Collection, Volume Two)

I ♥ E-Poetry entry
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Shockwave

Description (in English)

The poem is an abstract rendition of the rotten silk that fetters us people to these our awful screens. The graphics were generated in the CAVE writing text editor, by taking an ill-performing video screen capture of a spectral tube of "O"s in the editor's desktop preview mode. The audio was separately generated by improvisations into a Max/MSP patch. The title is after the late 60s anarchist affinity group, Up Against the Wall Mother Fuckers. I was inspired by their dramatic final exploit: cutting open the fences at Woodstock. The phrase Up Against the Screen Mother Fuckers started as the title for a CAVE piece, in which one thousand units of the people would enter the CAVE and break through its 4 screens to the vestibule holding the mirrors behind it.

The poem was composed between Paris and Cork, 1-5 July 2007. The media was generated at Brown University, October 2007 to June 2008. First screened in Providence at Couscous, organized by Mairéad Byrne

(Source: Electronic Literature Collection, Volume Two)

I ♥ E-Poetry entry
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Quicktime

Description (in English)

A recombinatory digital fiction/poem for predicting death. It uses the stripped down the code of an online slot machine game, replacing the cards with 15 five-line death fictions/poeticals. The artwork recombines the scenarios randomly every time you spin. The writing divides the scenarios into location, method, result and post-result of each death possibility. Additionally, you can win death videos/poetry visuals and free spins. Some are rather scared of this creature's forecasting tone, while others exalt in the absurdist joy of the way all stories are interchangeable, interrelated and happily random.

(Source: Author's description from Electronic Literature Collection, Volume Two)

I ♥ E-Poetry entry
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Technical notes

Requires Flash.