SELFIEPOETRY is a series of poems looking at some ways in which the inscription of the self (in today’s paradigmatic digital manifestation, i.e.: the selfie) can be reinterpreted against a very vague and unorthodox selection of artistic and literary trends. As of today, there are 8 poems, each constituting an intervention in a different movement. They also touch upon some very personal matters, since the author is intrigued by the many ways in which people today share their personal lives online.
Incomplete record (stub)
Doctor and Master in Literature Science at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ). Bachelor and Bachelor in Portuguese-English Literature by the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ). Professor of the Department of Letters and the Post-Graduate Program in Language Studies, Federal University of Mato Grosso (UFMT). Postdoctoral training at the University of Nottingham (UoN) in the UK. He works mainly in the following areas: Modern Foreign Languages; Modern and Contemporary Literature; Literature, Media and Technology; Semiology.
The Listeners is a linguistic performance, installation, and Amazon-distributed third-party app or skill – transacted between speakers or speaker-visitors and an Amazon Echo. The Echo embodies a voice-transactive Artificial Intelligence and domestic robot, that is named for its wake-word, Alexa. The Listeners is a custom software skill built on top of this infrastructure. The Listeners have their own interaction model. They listen and speak in their own way – as designed and scripted by the artist – using the distributed, cloud-based voice recognition and synthetic speech of Alexa and her services.
(Source: shadoof.net)
Synthetic Empathic Intelligent Companion Artefacts (SEICA) Human Interaction Labs' (seicalabs.org) is a speculative transmedia narrative and a 12 personae multimedia performance art project. The work attempts to thematically bridge concepts and creative processes employed within the fields of art, science and technology through hypertext fiction and on/offline storytelling. Positioned as a faux virtual organization, SEICA Human Interaction Labs is manifested through its online activities. Operated by a team of personae, the organization produces multimedia research works that reflect on how overhyped media portrayals and oversimplification of information package the modern perception towards scientific discovery and technological innovation. Blending and bending technocultural themes through tropes found in popular culture and internet vernacular, the fictive organization’s cybernetic researchers strive to orchestrate chaos and generate questions that critically engage with near-real-time discourses on human interaction in the age of companion robots. Recent multimedia research works include a study on (non)living things, hardware and intermediary interfaces, commercial user experience design and dopamine level manipulation, objects from the Institutional Cabinet of Curiosities (ICC), and a collaborative essay on re-imagining humanity inspired by Donna Haraway's "A Cyborg Manifesto" (1984). Disseminated through various platforms including social media, the project’s satirical nonlinear narrative unfolds through inquiry-based performances documented in the new media works, digital artefacts, speculative lab equipment, lab notes, and chat logs that further develop the ongoing dynamics between the interacting personae.

Pacific Surfliner is one in a series of videos that map the route of the Pacific Surfliner along the California coast – San Diego to San Luis Obispo. In so doing, they trace a kind of life story of a certain generation in time – arrivals and departures over the years, joy and loss. While *San Juan Capistrano* is a kind of central piece, touching on many life transformations, each piece takes a central emotion from its location. The individual videos are layered with images, sound, and text –experimenting with storytelling modes.



Spoken screens: the gap between presence and performance. One of the challenging issues with e-literature has been the relationship between reading a work and watching it performed. Some time-based or video work discourages the performative reading aspect altogether. Pacific Surfliner suggests a new approach – a text-rich, time-based piece that can be performed (or read silently).
Tools at hand/gaps in the field: The rapid turnover of software has changed the nature of e-lit production. On the one hand, large universities and labs with extensive resources allow for experimenting with expensive, cutting-edge technology. The “cottage-industry” artist, working at home [once a staple of emerging e-lit work], is pushed, more and more, into the need to use mass-produced, widely available tools. Whatever is at hand, whenever one starts to work…. Pacific Surfliner is made from smart phone videos and images, off-the-shelf video editing tools, recycled and re-edited audio tracks, and published with Vimeo.
The Pacific Surfliner works continue my career-long experiments with narrative structure and the blending of sensory media. The layering of time and space, the merging of history and private symbolism and events, and the presence of multiple voices are all part of the storyline. Each element: text, image, sound, and structure is almost equally important in conveying information about the story world.
The Forever Club is an ensemble web comedy using a mash-up of videos, texts, interactive elements, animations, audio, memes, and visual remnants of social media.
(Source: http://thenewriver.us/the-forever-club/)

A parallel component of the project is the companion website. TheForeverClub.com provides synopses and links to the episodes; biographies of the actors; idiosyncratic notes from the Director about the project (including a number of interactive features); a “FanFeed” for audience comments; and a contact page. This website complements the episodes and offers a fictional backstory to the episodic action and the project’s history.