The best way to understand Electronic Literature is to experience it first hand. Below is a list of work, exhibits featuring works, and organizations that provide access to databases of this emerging form of experimental media art form.

 

Examples of E-Lit

  1. Mohammad Sanajleh, http://sanajleh-shades.com/
  2. Alan Bigelow, “How to Rob a Bank, Part 1”
  3. Nissmah Roshdy, based on a poem by Mahmoud Darwish, “The Dice Player”
  4. Crows, Crows, Crows, “The Temple of No”
  5. Serge Bouchardon, “Loss of Grasp”
  6. Kate Pullinger, Inanimate Alice
  7. Sasha West, “Zoology”
  8. John Barber, “Heard from Space”
  9. Ingrid Anderson and Megan Sapnar, “Cruising”
  10. Philippe Bootz, Retournement
  11. Jason Nelson, “Game, Game, Game, and Game Again”
  12. Jason Edward Lewis, The POEMM Cycle
  13. Stephanie Strickland and Ian Hatcher, “Vniverse
  14. Jody Zellen, “Spine Sonnet”
  15. Dene Grigar, “The 24-Hour Micro E-Lit Project” 

 

Electronic Literature Exhibits:

  1. The Library of Congress: Electronic Literature & Its Emerging Forms
  2. British Computer Society: Beyond Grammatron
  3. Vancouver Downtown Library: Anthropoetry
  4. Nouspace Gallery:  Touch: The Art of the Mobile App
  5. Illuminations Gallery (Maynouth, Ireland): Moving Words

 

Other Resources:

Storyboarding Example: Andreas Muller’s “For All Seasons”
NetProv: What is NetProv? 
Twitterature Defined

literary-genres