Tag Archive for "conference" tag

Augmented e-poetry at ELO_AI

June 29th, 2010 by Christine Wilks | 1 comment

Strange things can happen to the reader when printed matter unlocks digital delights! In early June an international collection of e-literature was installed in a gallery setting in downtown Providence (Rhode Island, USA) for the Arts Program of the Electronic Literature Organization 2010 Conference (ELO_AI), including my own piece, Underbelly. There were many wonderful works [...]

CFP: Meaning-Making and Procedural Rhetoric in Casual, Art, and Indie Games (MLA 2011)

January 6th, 2010 by Mark Sample | 0

Meaning-Making and Procedural Rhetoric in Casual, Art, and Indie Games (MLA 2011, Los Angeles) This special session at the Modern Language Association’s 2011 conference aims to explore the cultural meaning of critically dismissed casual games, art games, and indie games. The format will be a Pecha Kucha style roundtable, with each presentation limited to 20 [...]

Call for work: ELO_AI: Archive & Innovate 2010

November 3rd, 2009 by danielhowe | 0

ELO_AI: Archive & Innovate

The Electronic Literature Organization’s
Fourth International Conference
& Program of Digitally Mediated Literary Art

June 3-6, 2010
Brown University
Providence, Rhode Island, USA

CFP – Transliteracy Conference 9 Feb 2010

October 20th, 2009 by Christine Wilks | 0

Call for Presentations Transliteracy Conference Tuesday 9 February 2010, 9:30 – 17:30 Phoenix Square Digital Media Centre, Leicester, UK In association with the Institute of Creative Technologies & the NLab Small Business Network,  De Montfort University www.transliteracy.com/conference2010.html Deadline for Abstracts:  1 December, 2009 Transliteracy is the ability to read, write and interact across a range [...]

In(ter)ventions: Literary Practice At The Edge

August 14th, 2009 by jakaorg | 2 comments

Just a short info on interesting conference in Canada (February 18, 2010 – February 21, 2010): In(ter)ventions, Literary Practice At The Edge: A Gathering. In(ter)ventions will explore the edges of literature, where technology, innovation, and literary practice meet. There is also open call for papers (deadline Oct. 15, 2009).