Blar i Bergen Open Research Archive på tidsskrift "Electronic Book Review (EBR)"
Viser treff 1-8 av 8
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Addressing Significant Societal Challenges Through Critical Digital Media
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2020)Just as novels, beyond their aesthetic and entertainment value, have always served as reflections of the cultural values, political debates, and societal challenges of the time in which they were produced, contemporary ... -
Appealing to Your Better Judgement: A Call for Database Criticism
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2020)Engagement with public databases has become a leading way for scholars, artists, and readers alike to encounter works of electronic literature as well as get an overview of the field. Although acknowledged as an important ... -
Better with the Sound On; or, The Singularity of Reading and Writing Under Constraint
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2021)With a focus on sound elements in the e-literary, Hannah Ackermans insightfully traces the role of accessibility and (dis)ability in electronic literature. Problematizing the universality of electronic literature practices ... -
Documenting a Field: The Life and Afterlife of the ELMCIP Collaborative Research Project and Electronic Literature Knowledge Base
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2021)The ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base is a large-scale digital humanities database that emerged from a six-nation European research project on electronic literature. The Knowledge Base has since grown to become ... -
Introduction: Electronic Literature as a Framework for the Digital Humanities
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2020) -
Lit Mods
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2020)Seiça describes modification as an art practice meant to subvert and divert from what we—as readers, spectators, and also consumers—expect from technological apparati and platforms. He extends the study of mods to “lit ... -
Our Struggle: Reading Karl Ove Knausgård’s Min Kamp
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2019)A extensive (11,700 word) roundtable discussion edited and revised for scientific publication: the authors consider the sometimes-frustrating but immersive experience of reading Knausgård's Min Kamp, its relation to ... -
Speculative Interfaces: How Electronic Literature Uses the Interface to Make Us Think about Technology
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2021)In a study that traverses more than half a century – going from e-lit precursor Christopher Strachey’s M.U.C. Love Letter Generator (1952) to Michael Joyce’s experimental hypertext afternoon: a story (1990) to Kate Pullinger’s ...