Incomplete record (stub)

Short description

This virtual exhibition was originally part of ACM Hypertext and Social Media 2020, a conference originally intended to be hosted at the University of Central Florida in July 2020. The exhibition was designed to be colocated with the Electronic Literature Organization Conference and Media Arts Show, happening the same week, and was thus distributed to artists in both communities for submissions.

Given the global state of crisis, this year’s exhibition was migrated, and a new call was distributed for online works designed to use hypertext to drive engagement with the current challenges. The curators distributed a call for works responding to the overwhelming “climates of change,” with a particular emphasis on the ongoing environmental crisis. Thinking globally can be overwhelming: thus, this exhibition asks artists and viewers to engage with these global concerns through the lens of local and the personal. The exhibit features works that are brief and poetic; works that engage with moments and personal challenges; works that respond to local challenges and warnings for the future that is already here. The curators welcomed works positioned through the lens of the current moment; works that challenge and inspire us; and works that call out for reflection and change.

The curators particularly encouraged those submitting to draw on personal experiences or connections or understandings about climate change, the impacts, causes and effects. Pieces might also engage with how that understanding is changing every day under our growing collective challenges.

(Source: https://projects.cah.ucf.edu/mediaartsexhibits/ClimatesOfChange/about.h…)

Images
Image
Climates of Change Gallery front page screenshot
Record Status
By Scott Rettberg, 8 December, 2020
Language
Year
Record Status
Abstract (in English)

How is the COVID-19 pandemic, resulting measures, and movement of cultural life online reflected in electronic literature and other digital narrative practices online? With this roundtable we propose an exploration and discussion of electronic literature during this time of COVID.

In the current situation, public libraries, theatres, cultural festivals have been closed across many countries and virtually all cultural life creative practices have moved online. This presents an opportunity for electronic literature and net art, but also necessitates new ways of understanding online media and making sense of current life worlds.

Works of e-lit, such as poetry and narrative generators, collective narratives, and interactive fiction, have already been developed that deal contextually and thematically with the virus, social distancing and isolation, and the absurdities of everyday life as we adjust to an online social sphere. Forms of a collective creativity, such as the popular meme of imitating classical paintings while sheltering place, and other types of online collective creativity, may signal the emergence of new e-lit related practices emerging during the COVID era.

The roundtable discussion will emerge from the shared activity of developing a focused research collection of works responding to or related to the pandemic in the ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base as an open-access research resource. We will use an online form and a Facebook group to launch this collective research, which will involve and be open to the larger research community.

(Source: Authors' abstract)

Complete video documentation of the panel discussion is available online.

Attachment
First name
Mirri
Last name
Glasson-Darling
Short biography

Mirri Glasson-Darling is an MFA candidate at Virginia Tech in Fiction. Short stories and poetry of hers has appeared in Willow Springs, Crab Orachard Review, Passages North, South Dakota Review, the Dr. TJ Eckleburg Review, Switchback, and Bosque Literary Magazine. She has also received an honorable mention from Glimmertrain.

First name
Lotte
Last name
Mitchell Reford
Short biography

Lotte Mitchell Reford is an MFA candidate in Poetry at Virginia Tech. She has an MLitt in Fiction from the University of Glasgow, and prefers the term 'multi-genre' to 'indecisive'. Lotte has had work (of various genres) published in MISO Magazine, National Collective, Far off Places and The Cadaverine. She ran From Glasgow to Saturnfor two years, and worked as Editorial and Production Manager for Luath Press, Edinburgh. She enjoys drinking, hand-rolled cigarettes, vegetarian pho, and long walks on icy beaches.

First name
Devin
Last name
Koch
Nationality
United States
Short biography

Devin Koch is an MFA candidate in poetry at Virginia Tech; a queer poet from Nebraska and former managing editor of the minnesota review. His poetry has appeared in Laurusand is the winner of the Marjorie Stover and Vreeland award.

First name
Tali
Last name
Cohen
Short biography

Tali Cohen has many hometowns. She is a poet and current MFA candidate at Virginia Tech. She hold a BA in Philosophy from the University of Tampa. Her writing can be found in Bridge Eight, Forklift OH, and elsewhere.