Wikipedia:WikiProject Electronic literature/List of missing articles about electronic literature
This is a list of topics related to electronic literature about which Wikipedia does not yet have articles. There are many important figures and works in electronic literature. Please suggest others that we can be working on. Please note: articles should only be created (even if they are listed here) if they meet WP:NBOOK and/or WP:GNG. Also please edit existing articles. If you don't have time to write an article it would be helpful if you could find sources that could be used by others. See Wikipedia:The Wikipedia Adventure for a quick tutorial.
Feel free to add to this list.
Articles Needed
[edit]Articles drafted
[edit]Please note that these are drafts and have not been moved to the main space for various reasons. Please check the talk before submitting these. Articles are started for:
- Mark Bernstein|Publisher as Mark has been a notable influence in the field.
- Draft:Tim McLaughlin has not been written yet
- Draft: Stephanie Boluk was rejected--should we just do one for Metagaming?
- Draft: Reham Hosny was rejected.(Drafted but needs review and research, needs translating from Egyptian Wikipedia)
- Renee Choba (Need to request this old draft).
Works of electronic literature
[edit]Before creating an article, please check whether the work is notable as a work according to Wikipedia:Notability (books). If you can't show it's notable, then it is likely to be deleted. In short, a work is notable if it has been the subject of at least two reviews or substantial discussions (more than a paragraph) in independent, reliable sources. E-lit works are rarely reviewed in mainstream press, but searching Google Scholar and Google Books for the title of the work and the author will often yield results. ELMCIP may also list critical works that reference the work, although not all of those will be substantial discussions. Remember to cite your sources. Another basis for notability is that it has been taught at at least two universities (do a google search for the title + syllabus, look at ELMCIP's syllabi or check on the Open Syllabus Project.
Works in and authors with collections in The NEXT Museum
[edit]- Alan Bigelow
- Reiner Strasser
- Jose Aburto
- John McDaid (writer)'s Uncle Buddy's Phantom Funhouse has an article and this work was recently emulated/translated.[1]
- We Descend is a complex hypertext novel featured in Pathfinders traversals in 2015 [2]
Featured in the Library of Congress 2013 Exhibit [3]
- Cruising by Ingrid Ankerson and Megan Sapnar's (2001)
- Signal to Noise by Ian Hatcher (2007) [4]
- This is not a poem by Alan Bigelow [5]
- “Loss of Grasp” by Serge Bouchardon(2010), winner of the 2011 New Media Writing Prize, has elicited scholarly studies among Polish literary critics applying liberatic theory and English-speaking literary critics examining literary games.[6]
- Arteroids by Jim Andrews [7]
- At Nightfall, the Goldfish 2021 Melody Mou Peijing
- Priti Pandurangan, Meghadutam 2019
- Marisa Parahm break.dance 2019
Robert Coover Award Winners without articles
[edit]- Jason Edward Lewis (Wikidata: Q111967505), Vital to the General Public Welfare - should the entry be for the PoEMM Cycle instead?
- There are few reliable sources on Vital but plenty on the PoEMM Cycle, which Vital is part of
- PoEMM (sometimes called P.o.E.M.M.) is a series of poems for touchscreen co-authored (or should we say co-edited?) by Jason Edward Lewis with Bruno Nadeau, who is not mentioned on the ELO Award page?[1][2][3] - ELMCIP record
- Samantha Gorman and Danny Cannizzaro, Pry (novel)
- Scott Rettberg and Roderick Coover, Hearts and Minds: The Interrogations Project
- Alan Bigelow, How To Rob a Bank https://webyarns.com/howto/howto.html Is the external website. This is featured in The NEXT Museum https://the-next.eliterature.org/works/2118/0/0/
- Will Luers, Hazel Smith, and Roger Dean, Novelling
- IP Yuk-Yiu, False Words 流/言
- Karen ann Donnachie and Andy Simionato, The Library of Nonhuman Books
- "Karen ann Donnachie and Andy Simionato’s The Library of Nonhuman Books (2019), an autonomous art installation where artificial intelligence is programmed to create new books from old publications"[4]
- Two paragraphs about the work here in this peer-reviewed book chapter.[5]
- Long paragraph about it in Jeneen Naji's book Digital Poetry (book), viewable on Google Books.[6]
- Brief mention in this German article: "Als Beispiel einer solchen Verbindung von KI-generierten Inhalten und automatisierter Produktion und Publikation über PoD-Plattformen kann The Library of Nonhuman Books dienen, die von Karen ann Donnachie und Andy Simionato als künstlerisches Experiment entwickelt wurde."[7]
- "The fair will prompt conversations about the future of publishing and reading with the likes of The Library of Nonhuman Books, an interactive vending machine inspired by the idea of a post-reading society which autonomously creates and publishes new books using artificial intelligence."[8]
- Written by the authors of the work but provides a clear overview of it.
- Leise Hook, The Vine and the Fish
- I can't find independent sources discussing this work, so I don't think it's notable in the Wikipedia sense yet, but it has been taught at some universities.[9] Lijil (talk) 15:53, 21 March 2024 (UTC)
- Everest Pipkin, Anonymous Animal.
- 2023 Runner-up: "The (m)Otherhood of Meep (the bat translator)" by Alinta Krauth
Influences and Interlinking
[edit]We are tracking influences and connections between existing articles and potential articles. Please note any citations for mentoring or for critiques. For example, Jill Walker Rettberg did a close reading of Michael Joyce's Afternoon, which won a Ted Nelson award...
Marjorie Luesebrink has been a mentor to many in the field https://electronicbookreview.com/essay/memorial-for-marjorie-c-luesebrink/
New Media Prize winners
[edit]Here is a list of winners of the New Media Writing Awards that shows which authors and works who won the New Media Writing Prize do not have Wikipedia articles. There are also links to their Wikidata pages and to the ELMCIP entries for works that have this.
Please note that not all of these works will be notable - you will need to see whether there are independent, reliable sources about them before making articles.
Literary Organizations
[edit]We need articles on trAce and Alt X We need edits on The NEXT Museum, Library, and Preservation Space Electronic Literature Organization
References
[edit]- ^ "Past ELO Award Winners – Electronic Literature Organization". Retrieved 2024-03-02.
- ^ Naji, Jeneen (2021), Naji, Jeneen (ed.), "Haptic Hermeneutics and Poetry Apps", Digital Poetry, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 43–54, doi:10.1007/978-3-030-65962-2_4, ISBN 978-3-030-65962-2, retrieved 2024-03-02,
Contemporary examples of mobile electronic literature apps are referenced such as Pry by Gorman and Cannizzaro, Abra! by Amaranth Borsuk, Kate Durbin and Ian Hatcher (& You), and finally Jason Edwards Lewis and Bruno Nadeau's PoEMM.
- ^ "Leonardo Flores" (2019-04-06). "Third Generation Electronic Literature › electronic book review". doi:10.7273/axyj-3574. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
Another transition from second to third generation practices is evident in the work of authors that develop work for popular platforms, such as iOS and Android. Jason Edward Lewis and Bruno Nadeau's Coover Award winning PoEMM Cycle, initially tapped into a 2nd generation poetics by being created for large screen installations equipped with touchscreen technology because they were challenging audience expectations with innovative poetic form. When implemented in iOS, however, these works and their form feel less innovative in terms of the gestural vocabulary that users of iOS and Android touchscreen devices are already accustomed to. Poetically, each poem is creating its own form-- a second generation Modernist move-- but they're more accessible to the massive audiences that Apple has cultivated for their devices.
- ^ Rustad, Hans Kristian Strandstuen (2023-08-21). Situating Scandinavian Poetry in the Computational Network Environment. De Gruyter. doi:10.1515/9783111004075. ISBN 978-3-11-100407-5.
- ^ Dethridge, Lisa (2021), Nankervis, Alan; Connell, Julia; Montague, Alan; Burgess, John (eds.), "Arts and Communications", The Fourth Industrial Revolution: What Does it Mean for Australian Industry?, Singapore: Springer Nature, pp. 107–124, doi:10.1007/978-981-16-1614-3_7, ISBN 978-981-16-1614-3, retrieved 2024-03-21
- ^ Naji, Jeneen (2021). Digital poetry. Palgrave pivot. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-3-030-65962-2.
- ^ Gilbert, Annette (December 2023). "Auchliteratur: Weichenstellung im Heute für die Literaturwissenschaft von Morgen". Deutsche Vierteljahrsschrift für Literaturwissenschaft und Geistesgeschichte (in German). 97 (4): 1103–1114. doi:10.1007/s41245-023-00232-7. ISSN 0012-0936.
- ^ Streader, Kate (2020-02-17). "Melbourne Art Book Fair will return to NGV in March". Beat Magazine. Retrieved 2024-03-21.
- ^ "Sustainable Futures. Many Activities (to choose from) | Studies on Intermediality and Intercultural Mediation". www.ucm.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-03-21.