Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 15, No. 584.
Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
<http://www.princeton.edu/~mccarty/humanist/>
<http://www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/humanist/>
[1] From: Deena Larsen <textra@chisp.net> (29)
Subject: online events for hypertext literature
[2] From: "Charles Baldwin" <Charles.Baldwin@mail.wvu.edu> (13)
Subject: announcing: crossing [digital] boundaries, buffalo
April 19-20
--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sun, 14 Apr 2002 08:11:02 +0100
From: Deena Larsen <textra@chisp.net>
Subject: online events for hypertext literature
I'd like to announce three great online events for hypertext
literature:
1) April 14 - June The Computers and Writing conference is an online
extravaganza of talks and presentations for the next six weeks. The
full schedule is at <http://www.eaze.net/~dene/cw2002_schedule.html>
The conference will be in Nouspace MOO. Registration is free at
<http://www.eaze.net/~dene/cw2002_registration.html > On the opening
Gala night, Sunday April 14th, Jan Rune Holmevik will set off virtual
Fireworks at 6 pm Central Time and Fred Kemp will talk about
distance education. Other exciting keynote speakers include: Kate
Hayles, Espen Aarseth, and Johndan Johnson-Eilola. Writers like
Marjorie Luesebrink, Diana Slattery, Jennifer Ley and Nick Montfort
and educators and more will speak and show works.
2) April 21 The ELO Symposium showcased 52 of today's hits in
electronic literature in the Symposium Gallery as well as three live
series of readings. Come meet the artists, mingle with the crowd and
toast to the genius of the age at April's trAce/ELO chat. We'll touch
on influences and trends, and explore the works themselves. You can
see online works at http://www.eliterature.org/state/creative.shtml
and join the Lingua MOO chat April 21 at 4 pm Eastern, 3 pm Central, 9
pm London, and 6 am Sydney at http://lingua.utdallas.edu:7000.
3) May 21 The trAcELO chat in May explores just what electronic new
media writing is all about. What ARE we talking about anyway? What
makes this writing different from any other writing? What makes this
art different? What are we doing that you just can't do on paper?
Guest speaker: Jill Walker. Join in the Lingua MOO chat May 19 at 4 pm
Eastern, 3 pm Central, 9 pm London, and 6 am Sydney at
http://lingua.utdallas.edu:7000.
Thanks
Deena
--[2]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sun, 14 Apr 2002 08:11:49 +0100
From: "Charles Baldwin" <Charles.Baldwin@mail.wvu.edu>
Subject: announcing: crossing [digital] boundaries, buffalo April
19-20
Announcing _Crossing [Digital] Boundaries_, a Humanities Computing
Colloquium to be held on April 19 and 20 at the campus of the State
University of New York at Buffalo.
Co-sponsored by West Virginia University's Center for Literary Computing
and SUNY Buffalo's Humanities Computing Center, the event brings together
digital poets, new media artists, and humanities computing scholars. The
goal is to present work and open discussion addressing the current state of
digital media poetics. Participants include Simon Biggs, Fakeshop, Alex
Galloway, Jim Rosenberg, and others. The colloquium is free and open to to
all so make the trip to Buffalo. (You can also join in for a live cuseeme
performance/collaboration on the night of April 20; contact
<mailto:charles.baldwin@mail.wvu.edu>charles.baldwin@mail.wvu.edu for details.)
For more information about the colloquium, see
<http://epc.buffalo.edu/dmp/events/hcc02.html>http://epc.buffalo.edu/dmp/events/hcc02.html.
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Sun Apr 14 2002 - 03:31:48 EDT