comparative literature

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Linköping University
Linköping
Sweden

Short description

The research project REP+REC+digit – Representations and Reconfigurations of the Digital in Swe­dish Literature and Art 1950–2010 – and Linköping University, Sweden, invite scholars in media archaeology, digital culture, artistic practice, media history, electronic texts, comparative literature and adjacent fields to the conference THINKING THROUGH THE DIGITAL IN LITERATURE – REPRESENTATIONS+POETICS+SITES+PUBLICATIONS, to be held at Linköping University, Sweden, 29 November to 1 December, 2017.

REP+REC+DIGIT explores different aspects of how digital technology and digital culture have influenced aesthetic and literary expressions since 1950, including digital artifacts, the digi­tization as motif, post-digital aesthetics and digital epistemology.

The topics of this event are derived from the questions that have been asked and explored throughout the project. The conference subtitle suggests four aspects of these explorations: The actual representation in art and literature; Aesthetic forms and critical reflec­tions; The material sites for writing and reading texts; and New interfaces for dissemination.

(Blog description)

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By Daniele Giampà, 7 April, 2018
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Abstract (in English)

Jessica Pressman is associated professor at San Diego State University (USA) and a member of the Board of Direction of the Electronic Literature Organization. This interview is focused on her work in the academic field, her essays and her books as well as the project of the Electronic Literature Organization.

By Sissel Hegvik, 16 April, 2013
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Abstract (in English)

A draft for a humorous comparative analysis of visualisations of pedestrian crossings in Scandinavia.

Abstract (in original language)

Morten Søndergaard har begået et udkast til en komparativ analyse af de nordiske gangarter. Udgangspunktet er de små gående mænd (og en enkelt kvinde) på de respektive landes forgængerskilte - fra den danske bodysnatcher til artikelforfatterens klare favorit: den norske hitmand.

Pull Quotes

Det fortælles, at folk i Irland kan sige, hvilken egn af landet en person kommer fra, alene ved at se på den måde han eller hun går på. Det er en fascinerende tanke at gangen, en af de mest almindelige menneskelige aktiviteter, i sig selv rummer en dialekt, der betegner os og som knytter sig til vores identitet. Den måde vi går på, fortæller altid lidt om, hvem vi er; om vi har god tid, om vi har travlt, om vi er forfulgte, om vi er forelskede, fulde, syge eller gamle etc. Når vi mødes på gadehjørnerne, så checker vi tilmed hinandens gang: "Hvordan går det?", "Ja, det går da meget godt", "Hovedet op og benene ned", "Nå du, nu må jeg løbe".

By Jill Walker Rettberg, 25 March, 2011
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No. 39
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Abstract (in English)

 

This paper, which is part of the collection of essays Reading Moving Letters (see introduction) reflects on what the emerging field of digital literature studies and the more established (but continually evolving) discipline of comparative literature might contribute to one another in terms of defining concepts and methods of literary analysis. My discussion is guided by the tentative proposition that the vexed status of the "national language" for comparative literature can be seen as analogous to the status of the "digital" for scholars undertaking research on computer-based literary texts. Aiming to overcome the ideological strictures of nationalism, many present-day comparatists are returning to the old question "what is literature?" and are placing renewed emphasis on the role of figurative language as a defining feature of literary texts and, consequently, as the appropriate focus of comparative textual analysis. Should scholarship in electronic literature head in a similar direction and cultivate skepticism about the essentialism of the digital, opening up greater possibilities for comparative work across literary media? In support of an affirmative answer to this question, the essay undertakes a detailed comparative analysis of Rainer Maria Rilke's poem "Herbst" ("Autumn") and American artist Rudy Lemcke's digital video poem "The Uninvited."

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