590 likes | 600 Views
ELMCIP is a 3-year research project investigating the formation of creative communities within a global communication environment. Partners across Europe collaborate to create a shared archive and research network in electronic literature.
E N D
ELMCIP is a 3-year collaborative research project running from June 2010-2013 and a part of the HERA Joint Research Project framework: 'Humanities as a Source of Creativity and Innovation' ELMCIP involves seven European research partners and one non-academic partner investigating: How creative communities of practitioners form within a transnational and transcultural context in a globalized and distributed communication environment
PROJECT PARTNERS ELMCIPCONSORTIUM PARTNERS
IMPACT & IMPORT In the USA, the ELO (Electronic Literature Organization) functions as a hub for practictioners and theoreticians of electronic literature. While Europe is hosting key creative, theoretical and scholarly practitioners, events and communities of electronic literature – it has lacked a shared research infrastructure. ELMCIP seeks to gather the multitude of practices and theories in electronic literature, existing in a multi-linguistic and multicultural Europe, in order to create a shared archive and research network.
OUTCOMES • Series of case studies and research papers(for publications and conference presentations) • Series of public seminars and workshops • International conference • Public exhibition of electronic literature artworks and performances • Openly distributed publications(conference proceedings, exhibition catalog, report, and special issues of journals) • Electronic Literature Knowledge Base (materials from seminars, project information, and an extensive cross-referenced bibliographic research platform) • Anthology of European Electronic Literature(Published on USB and an accessible website, including pedagogical materials)
BUDGET ELMCIP Budget has supported Researcher time (teaching buyouts) Post-docs and Ph.D. Eric Rasmussen (UiB) David Prater (BTH) Giovanna di Rosario (UJ) Markuu Eskelinen (UJ) Magnus Lawrie (UE) Technicians and Designers Administrative support Event costs Publication costs Artistic commission costs Development costs Budget total: ≈ EUR 1 mill.
PARTNERS UNIVERSITY OF BERGEN (NO) • Scott Rettberg • - Associate Professor of Digital Culture • Jill Walker Rettberg • Professor of Digital Culture • Individual project responsibilities: • Overall project administration • Seminar on Electronic Literature Communities • Developing the Electronic Literature Knowledge Base • Final report • Team has included: Eric Rasmussen, Patricia Tomaszek, Elisabeth Nesheim, Stein Magne Bjørklund, Thomas Brevik, Aud Gjersdal, Meri Raita, Quinn Dombrowski, Fulbright researchers Davin Heckman and Leonardo Flores, guest researchers Mark Marino, Rita Raley, Luciana Gattass, Melissa Lucas, and UiB digital culture students.
PARTNERS • Maria Engberg- Associate Professor of Digital CultureTalanMemmott • Associate Professor of Digital Culture • Individualprojectresponsibilities: • Research onpedagogicalmodels and electronicliteratureanthologies • Workshop onelectronicliterature in education • Production of ELMCIP Anthology of European Electronic Literature • Team has included: David Prater, Patrick Thorsson, Martin Arvebro, Eric Snodgrass, Ali Teherani, Olawale David, and • Joel Wennberg BLEKINGE INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY (SE)
PARTNERS • JanezStrehovec- Associate Professor of New Media Theory • Individualprojectresponsibilities: • Seminar on New Media Histories • Individualresearchonnew media specificityofelectronicliterature • Seminar projectassistant: Dr. MajaMurnik UNIVERSITY OF LJUBLJANA (SI)
PARTNERS • Yra van Dijk- Assistant Professor of Modern Dutch Literature • Individual project responsibilities: • Seminar on Digital Poetics • Proposed publication of papers in: Arcadia. International Journal of Literary Culture. • Individual research on topics including: Collaboration in Digital Literature, Digital paratexts, Materiality and Cultural memory in European Digital Literature, Poetics in Communities of Digital Authors. UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM (NL)
PARTNERS • RaineKoskimaaProfessor of Contemporary Culture Studies • Individualprojectresponsibilities: • Seminar on Electronic Literature Publishing and othervenues • Electronic Literature Publishing survey • Team has included: Giovanna di Rosario, Markku Eskelinen UNIVERSITY OF JYVÄSKYLÄ (FI)
PARTNERS • Jerome Fletcher- Associate Professor of Performance Writing • Individualprojectresponsibilities: • Seminar on Electronic Literature and Performance • Survey ofperformancecontexts • Curate and exhibitperformanceworks at projectconference UNIVERSITY COLLEGE FALMOUTH (UK)
PARTNERS EDINBURGH COLLEGE OF ART, U OF EDINBURGH (UK) • Simon Biggs- Professor • Penny Travlou- Researcher in ethnography and digital culture • Individual project responsibilities: • Ethnographic study of networked creative communities • Remediating the Social conference and exhibition • Team has included: Elizabeth Hodson, Hadi Mehrpouya, Diego Zamora, Rocio von Jungenfeld, Karl Monsen, Angela Fernandez Orviz, Richard Ashrowan, Agnese Sile, Amy Guy, Gerry Smith, Jose Daniel Leal, Shu Wang. Design work by Dirty White Design (Ana Clara Barbara and Emmi Hartikainen)
NON-ACADEMIC PARTNER NEW MEDIA SCOTLAND (UK) • Mark Daniels- ExecutiveDirector • Collaboration with Edinburgh College of Art and University College Falmouth to realizetheRemediatingtheSocialexhibition and performance program.
Electronic Literature in Europe, University of Bergen November 2008
Electronic Literature Communities SeminarUniversity of Bergen, September 2010
Electronic Literature Publishing Seminar,University of Jyväskylä, March 2011
Workshop on Electronic Literature Pedagogy, Blekinge Institute of Technology, June 2011
International Workshop on Databases and Bibliographic Standards for Electronic Literature University of Bergen, June 2011
E-Literature and New Media Art SeminarLjubljana, Slovenia, September 2011
Digital Poetics and the Present Amsterdam, December 2011
Digital Textuality with/in Performance Bristol, May 2012
Video and multimedia documentation of works and events made accessible
Extensive cross-referencing to show works in their critical contexts