arabic electronic literature

By Hannah Ackermans, 24 March, 2021
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Abstract (in English)

A Dictionary of the Revolution by Amira Hanafi was the first Arabic e-lit piece to come to my mind when thinking of what to present in the ELO salon. It is available in English and Arabic so, the English-speaking audience will be able to engage in the reading process. This piece is based on the idea of the January 25th revolution in Egypt, which is a special event to all Egyptians. I thought that the Western audience would be interested in knowing more about this glorious revolution. Most importantly, the technique of weaving different voices into one text and visualizing it in a wheel-shaped dictionary is unique. In addition to all these causes that make A Dictionary of the Revolution a good fit to the ELO salon’s presentation, this piece is the winner of the New Media Writing Prize and The Public Library Prize for Electronic Literature.

The process of creating this piece is interesting. The digital artist Amira Hanafi did meetings with 200 persons from 6 Egyptian governorates: Alexandria, Aswan, Cairo, Mansoura, Sinai, and Suez in the time period from March to August 2014. She asked those people to choose a card from a vocabulary box containing 160 words in Egyptian colloquial related to the Egyptian revolution. People were required to speak about the chosen word namely, its definition and the related accounts. The interviews’ recordings were transcribed and woven by the artist to end up with multi-voiced storytelling on the Egyptian revolution.

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Short description

The international conference on Arabic Electronic Literature: New Horizons and Global Perspectives, will be held in Dubai, UAE from February 25-27, 2018. The conference is organized by Rochester Institute of Technology and hosted at the RIT-Dubai campus.

In a world of global networks and transnational information flows, electronic literature (commonly defined as “born digital” literature or e-lit) is a site for new forms of communication, creation, and community. While much of the prominent current scholarly and artistic work in elit is based in the USA and Europe, e-lit is in fact a diverse global practice. In the Arab world,there is a growing network of e-lit scholars, many of whom are also practitioners or deeply connected to artistic practices. Interested authors and experts are invited to submit papers and creative works on topics including, but not limited to:

• scholarship on digital literature and digital criticism as a field and in a global context;• intercultural issues in literacy, expression, and difference;• communication and publishing in digital and social media environments;• histories, precursors, movements, and readings;• emulations, virtualizations, re-readings, and interpretations;• preservation, archiving, and access;• methods, tools, and best practices for creation and scholarship;• translations, including linguistic, intermedial and intersemiotic, code-text translation;• children’s electronic literature;• and other research topics related to the conference theme.

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By Miriam Takvam, 29 August, 2018
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The first ever conference focusing on Arab electronic literature was held last February in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Until this conference, little was know of efforts in the Arab world to create and share electronic literature. This presentation introduces one author, Mohamed Habibi, and some of his works of video poetry, that, as argued here, are grounded more in sound than vision.

(Source: Author's abstract from ELO 2018 conference site)

By Daniele Giampà, 5 April, 2018
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Reham Hosny is a member of the Arabic Electronic Literature research group. In this interview, she talks about the influence of Arabic culture in the field of technology and electronic literature as well as the projects of the research group.

By Daniele Giampà, 5 April, 2018
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Eman Younis is a member of the Arabic Electronic Literature research group. In this interview, she talks about the influence of Arabic culture in the field of electronic literature and Arabic authors.

By Daniele Giampà, 5 April, 2018
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Promotional interview for an event organized by the Arabic Electronic Literature research group.