Webshelf by time:
Most hypertext/electronic/new media works have a hidden time commitment--and so I tried to organize these in terms of the time it will take to see what is going on--not to understand the whole work. Some of these, particularly in my first category, can be seen and thoroughly "grokked" quickly. Others can be seen quickly and not grokked in a lifetime. Saying you can read this in an hour is like saying you can read T.S. Eliot's the Wasteland in an hour. Yes, you can but it isn't all that is there. So this is just a way to let you know up front what you might want to look at given your time constraints. It is by no means a description of how long to spend with a work.
Writing about elit:
- Close readings from Word Circuits
- Brian Stefan's Introduction to Electronic Literature: a freeware guide
- About Electronic Literature: New Horizons for the Literary
Places for works
- i-trace-French
Elit WriterWebsites:
- Randy Adams
- Bruce Andrews
- Jim Andrews
- Thomas Bell
- Serge Bouchardon
- Kathryn Cramer
- David Daniels
- Claire Dinsmore
- Geoffrey Gatza's Blazevox
- geniwaite
- Loss Pequeño Glazier
- Valery Grancher
- George Hartley
- N. Katherine Hayles
- Shelley Jackson
- Peter Howard
- Robert Kendall
- M.D. Coverley (Marjorie Luesebrink)
- mIEKAL aND
- Rob McLennan
- Mez
- Judy Malloy
- Talan Memmott
- Millie Niss
- Margaret Penfold
- Regina
Célia Pinto
Jim Rosenberg - Lynda Schor
- Steven Shaviro
- Alan
Sondheim
Stephanie Strickland - Sue Thomas
- Duc Thuan
- Gregory Ulmer
- Ana Maria Uribe
- Ted Warnell
- Joel
Weishaus
Komninos Zervos - French:
MISSING
- Halvard Johnson
- Bill Marsh
- Christy Sheffield Sanford