web 2.0

By Alvaro Seica, 15 May, 2015
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Abstract (in English)

This paper argues that digital literature can be understood as a social hermeneutic dispositif. To demonstrate this thesis, an experimental book is presented. It is written/read using a geo-tagging software, that restitutes, to the reader acting as a co-author in a Web 2.0/3.0 context, the combination of significant (semantic) keywords (or tags) with a given city place and with a certain social temporality. The novel’s title is based in the philosophical idea of deixis, i.e., the articulation of space (geo), time (neo) and logos (discourse, reason). In the interface, the fictional text presents, at each scene, 3 writing/reading itineraries, each one using a specific literary medium/language, referring, in a greater or lesser extent, to dimensions ‘space’, ‘time’ and ‘logos’. A first text has linguistic nature and was deconstructed into several sub-texts types: narrative (mention of major events), dialogic (characters dialogues) and meta-informative (keywords, tags). A second ‘text’ uses visual language inherent to characters and scenery photos (space or synchronic level) subjacent to the novel’s scenes (time or diachronic level). A 3rd ‘text’ refers to the language of maps, which represent the course (time) of the paths (space) used by novel’s characters in their daily lives both in the real and fictional world. The first (seminal) author associated photos both to the moment they were taken and to the urban space where these photos were captured or to a point in cyberspace.

(Source: ELD 2015)

By Arngeir Enåsen, 14 October, 2013
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Au milieu des années 90 le développement du web a suscité beaucoup d'espérance de la part des poètes expérimentaux, qu'ils y voient la possibilité d'une diffusion de leurs travaux ou qu'ils envisagent des formes créatives nouvelles tirant parti des spécificités du réseau; en 97-98 était publié un numéro spécial de la revue DOC(K)S consacré au web: "un notre web", complété par un CD contenant des oeuvres numériques trouvées en ligne. Il s'agit aujourd'hui de faire le point et sur les auteurs présents dans ce numéro, sur les sites qu'ils animaient alors, sur les transformations intervenues, et surtout sur l'enthousiasme utopique de ces années en se demandant quelle place, dans la zone française, occupent aujourd'hui les poésies numériques en ligne. Au final, l'enquête conduite, sur la base d'une recherche systématique, manifeste le peu de visibilité de ces travaux et tente d'en analyser les causes.

(Source: Author's abstract from ELO 2013)

By Audun Andreassen, 3 April, 2013
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At The MITH/ELO Symposium, guest speaker N. Katherine Hayles concluded her talk proposing that electronic literature needed to leave the limits and the realm of the screen. Her words proved an inspiration to our panel. The HERMENEIA Research Group (www.hermeneia.net) and the Centro Avanzado de Investigación en Inteligencia Artificial (CAVIIAR-the Advanced Research Center in Artificial Intelligence) subsequently proposed to the Spanish Department of Industry and Technology the generation of a literary space that would use the technologies foreseen as having the greatest social penetration: cellular telephony, personal computation, Web 2.0 and geographical positioning, i.e. a literary GPS.

Among the technologies that have seen a meteoric rise in the last decade, the Global Positioning System (GPS) holds a prominent place. The concept of geo-location (to determine precisely the current position on earth’s surface, often within meter precision) has permeated society and is now an integral part of every day’s life. This technology is possible thanks to a network of satellites that orbit the earth, and transmit a signal encoded according to a public protocol. A literary GPS could deliver iambic feet to meters of readers across a city. Such a system was named the Global Poetic System Version 1, and was granted with an endowment of 200.000 € for a year of execution (2008). As of 2009, the system has gone through two iterations; therefore the current implementation is termed the Global Poetic System Version 2 (GPS2). The GPS2 seamlessly glues together literary information and geographic positioning. The GPS2 is an ambitious project that tries to incorporate literary creations into the space of digital technologies, bringing literature over to the great public. The literary works it has delivered have been both new creations and works from canonical archives.

Racing from projects such as Legible City, the city in the background of Alex Gopher’s The Child, or Antoni Abad’s project Canal*ACCESSIBLE out to the street and out of the strictly literary context, readers would interact with the environment by means of readings. Our project wanted to foment literary consumption in the social environment associated with the reading, and stimulate the creation of social networks associated with the shared experience of literature. in which handicapped people in Barcelona uploaded inaccessible locations to an online database via multimedia SMS, we longed for the possibility of constructing a literary city where people could read literature, share their readings, and propose texts through a system. We imagined an interface where readers could download a literary adventure to their handheld devices (GPS receiver, PDA, phone), and go on a walk while listening to some famous poems, or let a machine create randomized poems with geo-located literary information.

After a thorough review of the genre of located narrative, we discuss antecedents and works in-progress, including The L.A. Flood Project , Senghor on the rocks, The Ruyi, Venice Act, etc. Our panelists will discuss various aspects of this system and discuss its potential future applications for literary innovations and archiving.

 (Source: Authors' abstract for ELO_AI)

By Audun Andreassen, 3 April, 2013
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Advancements in social/participatory media and electronic networking technologies help bring to focus the complex interplay between aesthetics and politics common to all modern community interaction. Historically speaking, few other media formats have transformed social frameworks as acutely as contemporary online networks have. On one level, the diverse communities and social aggregates derived from such technologies seem to follow many of modernity’s more radical ideological critiques of what the philosopher Robert P. Pippen identifies specifically as “bourgeois subjectivity,” re-imagining voice and identity as collective formations to be culled from the cultural and political margins of the state. Distinct, however, from these prior revisionary challenges to cultural and social production, digital “network relations,” with their emphases on convergence over conflict, performance over practice, critically re-situate the traditional modern dialectic between individual and collective modes of agency that has dominated ideologico-political argument for the past century.

My paper aims to analyze how advances in new social media technologies continue to offer a poignant critique of the bourgeois subjectivity, while at the same time challenging traditional communal/collective modes of interaction as its primary ideologico-political alternative. Pippen, one of America’s pre-eminent writers on German idealism, reminds us that philosophical debates concerning the autonomy of the modern subject from Hegel onward have always approached the concept of individual consciousness through negation, often emphasizing its role as a kind of rationalising counter-structure to the more natural diversity of sensual experience. Even today, he notes, the prevailing “tone of post-Hegelian European thought and culture” remains one of “profound suspicion” concerning the one “notion central to the self-understanding and legitimation of the bourgeois form of life: the free, rational independent, reflective, self-determining subject.” The rise of social media technologies over the last decade, inaugurating what cultural historians and information theorists alike have labelled “Web 2.0”, can be usefully read within the broader context of western culture’s ongoing argument with subjectivity as a state of being perpetually on the edge of its own dissolution. Yet rather than merely augment earlier intellectual preferences for collective models of socio-political agency, the contemporary community as electronic network, as my paper will demonstrate, reveals strikingly new paradigms of subjectivity specific to informatic culture and its uniquely integrated re-designation of society’s public and private spheres. To help frame these paradigms, as well as relate them conceptually to contemporary examples of revisionary electronic literature/writing, my paper will recall one of screen culture’s more enduring – not to mention, playful – narratives, symptomatic, I argue, of the West’s consistently apprehensive, i.e., “suspicious,” approach to modern subjectivity: the “broken mirror” sketch-routine, popular in many early Hollywood comedies onward from the silent era. In this narrative, two participants dressed identically farcically mimic each other’s gestures face-to-face, while one of them is under the illusion that a mirror is in place, reflecting her image. As the sketch progresses, the deluded participant gradually comes to realise that no reflective surface is, in fact, present; either it was broken previously or it never existed in the first place. Of course, audience members watching the performance are never unaware that the framework in front of the protagonist is actually an open portal, revealing a completely separate subjectivity or identity across the way. The humour in the sketch, however, derives not from the performer’s realisation that the mirror is missing – in other words, not from the deluded subject’s gradual enlightenment, but rather just the opposite: once aware that the mirror is missing, the subject does everything she can do to maintain the illusion that the reflection is continuous, that the person on the other side of the portal is and always has been an image of one’s own self. Similarly, the viewer facing today’s networked screens cannot but realise that the images peering back at her are not her reflection – in fact, bear almost no expressive or existential relationship to her, and instead signify a very different social relationship to the external world. Yet, in order to maintain some semblance of continuity in both the self and its apprehension of the world, it seems necessary to consider (however erroneously) the growing number of networks surrounding us as a kind of reflective surface, revealing in the narratives to follow a uniquely porous sense of social environment, never fully visible, though always present.

(Source: Author's abstract for ELO_AI)

By Eric Dean Rasmussen, 7 April, 2012
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Pull Quotes

Currently organizations such as Turbulence.org and the Electronic Literature Organization provide major funding for new net.art projects.33 Countering generally accepted assumptions that the WWW is a medium catering to business and entertainment industries, much of this visual art furthers the reach of Situationism and psychogeography into the virtual space of the World Wide Web, offering new ways that aesthetic defamiliarization and poetic détournement may spatialize and release the pleasure of federated moments of time.

By Eric Dean Rasmussen, 1 November, 2011
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978-0-313-38749-4
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xvii, 275
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All Rights reserved
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Approved by librarian
Pull Quotes

Data lack intrinsic meaning, while stories are all about meaning.

For a given audience, a story is a sequence of content, anchored on a probelm, which engagest that audience with emotion and meaning.

The first decade of the Web, approximately 1994-2004, saw a great deal of browser-based storytelling.

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By Jill Walker Rettberg, 1 November, 2011
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CC Attribution
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Abstract (in English)

Overview of dozens of examples of what the authors call "Web 2.0 Storytelling" - narratives told on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and other social media.

Platform referenced
By Eric Dean Rasmussen, 20 October, 2011
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1-30
Journal volume and issue
42.1
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All Rights reserved
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Abstract (in English)

Reflecting on the relation between the media ages of orality, writing, and digital networking, Liu asks the question: what happens today to the “sense of history” that was the glory of the high age of print? In particular, what does the age of social computing—social networking, blogs, Twitter, etc.—have in common with prior ages in which the experience of sociality was deeply vested in a shared sense of history? Liu focuses on a comparison of nineteenth-century historicism and contemporary Web 2.0, and concludes by touching on the RoSE Research-oriented Social Environment that the Transliteracies Project he directs has been building to model past bibliographical resources as a social network. (Source: author's abstract)

Pull Quotes

The digital sense of history may not be history as it really was, but it is information as it should really be: an experience of mediated communication that—as a condition of what it means to be social—is historical to the core.

My argument is that the amplest experience of sociality includes the society that is history, and social media will be more fully human if it remembers that.

Cultural-political theorists of digital-age “empire” (in the tradition of Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri), academic critics of new media, and hactivist or tactical-media theorists (in the tradition of the Critical Art Ensemble) point out in various ways that Web 2.0 is still complicit with the confining structures of history.

By Eric Dean Rasmussen, 31 August, 2011
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465-502
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CC Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives
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Abstract (in English)

Note: Tabbi's essay was posted on July 22, 2009, on the online forum On the Human, hosted by the National Humanities Center where it generated 35 additional posts. It was reprinted, along edited versions of these responses, in Beyond the Screen: Transformations of Literary Structures, Interfaces and Genres (Transcript, 2010). These responses are archived separtedly in the ELMCIP Knowledge Base As "Responses to 'On Reading 300 Works of Electronic Literature: Preliminary Reflections.'"

Pull Quotes

[T]he often-noted "obsolescence" of works published in perpetually "new" media is an institutional and cognitive problem as much as a technological challenge.

Whatever transformations the Humanities undergo in new media, a condition for the field's possibility has to be the ability to re-read, and the freedom to cite, the work of peers and precursors.

An evolving glossary of electronic literary terms... has to be applied to works consistently and with an awareness of tag clouds forming throughout the Internet... Moreover, the terms will have to change as the kind of work produced in electronic environments change, and these changes can be tracked.

What scholars can then construct is not so much a universal set of categories defining 'electronic literature,' 'net literature,' or 'digital or online literature,' but rather a practice capable of producing a poetics.

What I'm reading, for the most part, doesn't often differentiate between between 'critical' and 'creative' writing; the most prolific e-lit authors are also programmers and designers who seem to be as comfortable conversing with scientists and technologists as with other writers.

Description (in English)

Roman Jakobson defined the poetic function of language as being governed by principles of selection and order. Under this vision the poet is in charge of selecting and organising words in a particular way in order to achieve a poetic effect.ACITEOP is a programme that groups together different experimental tools used for constructing poetic narratives, both textual and visual, through the deconstruction of the poetic function of language using different algorithms.The result, which is different with each reading or interaction, is both a deconstructed text and a brand new piece of work generated from that same process of deconstruction.This first version is a simple example of the programme that creates a narrative based on text, sound and images, which begins with the deconstruction of the poem "Between What I See and What I Say" by Octavio Paz, who dedicated the poem to the Russian linguist Roman Jakobson after his death.

Description (in original language)

Roman Jakobson delimitó la función poética del lenguaje como aquella regida por los principios deselección y ordenación.Bajo esta visión el poeta sería el encargado de seleccionar y ordenar de una determinada manera laspalabras para conseguir el efecto poético.ACITEOP es un programa que intenta agrupar distintas herramientas experimentales de construcciónde narrativas poéticas - textuales y visuales - a partir de la deconstrucción de la función poética delenguaje a través de diferentes algoritmos.El resultado, siempre distinto en cada lectura o interacción, es un texto deconstruido y al mismo tiempouna nueva obra generada por ese proceso de deconstrucción.Esta primera versión es un ejemplo sencillo del programa que crea una narrativa basada en texto, audioe imágenes que comienza con la deconstrucción de un poema que Octavio Paz dedicó al lingüista rusoRoman Jakobson tras su muerte y que tituló Entre lo que veo y digo.

I ♥ E-Poetry entry
Pull Quotes

Entre lo que veo y lo que digo.

Between What I See and What I Say.

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