Digital poemas based on the book Tesauro (Thesaurus), which was published by the National Council for the Culture and Arts (CONACULTA) in 2010.
The first section of this poetry book won the First Prize for Poetry Contest of Magazine “Punto de Partida” of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM).
Some of this digital poems in their printed form are part of the book in Visual Mexican Poetry: The Transfigured Word, a collection of five artist-books published by the National Council for the Culture and Arts (CONACULTA).
(Source: http://www.poetronica.net/digitalpoetry.html)
poetic language
Poemas digitales basados en mi libro Tesauro, que fue publicado por el Fondo Editorial Tierra Adentro del Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes (CONACULTA) en 2010.
Un fragmento de este poemario obtuvo el Primer premio de poesía en el Concurso 39° de la revista Punto de Partida de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM). Algunos de estos poemas digitales aparecen en su versión impresa en Poesía visual mexicana: la palabra transfigurada, una colección de cinco libros-objeto del Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes (CONACULTA).
(Source: http://www.poetronica.net/digitalpoetry.html)
¡AH! Interj. Condemnation to Female and Masculinity
// Humanity: They still understand what was before
// To derive the existence together
Live performance, with recorded elements, of an audio work that explores neutral voice, artificial voice, acousmatic voice, voice and its relationship to the reader. This performance will also incorporate quasi-algorithmic, appropriative microcollage (with results from network services) particularly in the recorded passages. The performance requires that the artist is able to connect his computer's audio interface(s) to a relatively high-quality stereo PA system. A number of sample development pieces and proofs of concept are available at: http://programmatology.shadoof.net?p=contents/auralityrecordings.html.
(Source: ELO 2015 Catalog)
In this work, Bigelow takes everyday objects (stapler, chair, spoon) and elevates them to archetypal status through several strategies:
* short, looping background videos (with audio) of natural scenes, usually focused on animals or plants, intercut with brief images of the object being discussed.
* A poetic description of the object, using metaphor, personification, and other figurative language to highlight their function or role.
* A scheduled set of fake historical events involving the object, often absurd and hilarious, including the location and the date in which they happened.
This level of attention to everyday objects is parallel to Gertrude Stein’s Tender Buttons, but with a different approach to its language choices. While Stein chooses language that belongs to the same semantic frame of the objects she describes, Bigelow breaks (or blends) the frames to take a twist towards the absurd. These objects become archetypal because they are presented as tools that shape their creators as much as the world around them, connecting them to nature and humanity at a global level.
The final choice given to the reader is a surprisingly effective Turing Test.
(Source: Leonardo Flores, I ♥ E-Poetry)
This study has as its main research object the new forms of poetry based on informatics and it is located in the fields of critical theory, hermeneutics, semiotics of the text and digital culture.
These new forms emerging from the meeting of poetry and informatics are collectively called Digital Poetry. Digital poetry – also referred to as E-poetry, short for electronic poetry – refers to a wide range of approaches to poetry that all have in common the prominent and crucial use of computers or digital technologies and other devices. Digital poetry does not concern itself with the digitalization of printed works, it relates to digital texts. This work studies only electronic poems created to be read on the computer accessible online. It offers the close-readings of 35 e-poems in 5 different languages (English, French, Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish).
How does electronic poetry deal with the possibilities uncovered by the new digital medium? A medium that easily allows us to redefine the writing space and the reading time; a medium that allows us to include images and sounds alongside the graphic text, adding also motion and creating new kinds of temporalities; and, finally, that allows the text to be reactive and interactive?
The distinction between digital and printed media hides a complex history. A full comprehension of the movement under consideration, as a concept in literature, requires clarification of the historical development from the “movement analogies” in printed literature (innovations in the literary movements and avant-gardes) to the literary innovations (poetic and artistic) in the Internet era.
The thesis has been organized around three deeply interconnected approaches: historical, descriptive and analytic. The first approach judges the “novelty” of the phenomenon within a historical context. The descriptive work to be done on the corpus is fundamental in order to establish a sort of typology of e-poetry and, consequently, to be able to start the analytic work.
The aim of the study is on the one hand to categorize electronic poems in order to make them more approachable and understandable as objects of study; and on the other it is to provide those who are interested in this new area of study with a sort of critical anthology of electronic poetry.
(Source: Author's abstract)