Rachid Benharrousse is a Doctoral Candidate at Mohammed V University in Rabat. He was an Early Career Researcher at the Association of Middle Eastern Women's Studies (AMEWS), and a Researcher of Digital Studies at the Berkman Klein Center at Harvard University. Currently, Benharrousse is an Early Career Researcher at the African Academy for Migration Research (AAMR) at the University of Witwatersrand, a Researcher at the Palah Light Lab at the University at Buffalo, SUNY, and a Research Collaborator at the Paris Institute for Critical Thinking (PICT). His research interests are Digital Studies, Cultural Studies, African Studies, and Migration studies.
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Jess Erion
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Coming soon!
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Professor Leonardo Flores is Chair of the English Department at Appalachian State University. He served as President of the Electronic Literature Organization from 2019 to 2022. He was the 2012-2013 Fulbright Scholar in Digital Culture at the University of Bergen in Norway and was a professor in the English Department at University of Puerto Rico: Mayagüez Campus from 1994 to 2019. His research areas are electronic literature, with a focus on digital poetry, and the history and strategic growth of the field. He’s known for I ♥ E-Poetry, the Electronic Literature Collection, Volume 3, “Third Generation Electronic Literature” and the Antología Lit(e)Lat, Volume 1. For more information on his current work, visit leonardoflores.net.
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Jenny (Lijie) Lee
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Jenny works in Ningxia University, China as a teacher of American Literature. In the past decade, she has been working on American e-literature; and in recent years she turned to research on Chinese webnovels. She goes exploring more new media literature in America and for most of the times she's doing a comparison on American and Chinese new media literary expression.
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Mark C. Marino is a writer and scholar of electronic literature. His works include “a show of hands”, “Salt Immortal Sea” with Joellyn Rock, John Murray, and Ken Joseph, "The Ballad of Workstudy Seth", and Mrs. Wobbles and the Tangerine House. He also teaches writing at the University of Southern California where he Directs the Humanities and Critical Code Studies Lab. Mark is the Director of Communication of the Electronic Literature Organization.
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Nick Montfort is a poet and artist who uses computation as his main medium and seeks to uncover how computing and language are entangled with each other and with culture. His computer-generated books include #! and Golem. His digital projects include the collaborations The Deletionist and Sea and Spar Between. Montfort also studies creative computing. MIT Press has published his The New Media Reader, Twisty Little Passages, The Future, and Exploratory Programming for the Arts and Humanities. He directs a lab/studio, The Trope Tank, and is professor of digital media at MIT. He lives in New York City.
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Professor at the Institute for Audiovisual Arts, Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Poland, and a member of the Electronic Literature Organization’s Board of Directors. She is the author of three Polish-language books about television and gender, popular culture, and locative media. Her diverse research interests include vernacular digital culture, new media art, electronic literature, and environmental humanities. Her most recent publications discuss colonialization in video games; anti-racist and feminist activism in Polish-language online spaces; participatory culture in VR and revitalization of Jenkins’ notion of transmedia storytelling. She is also an improvisational musician and sound artist with the Magic Carpathians Project, among others and an avid permaculture gardener. Since 2020, she has been collaborating with Victoria Vesna and UCLA Sci|Art Center. They are currently working on a collaborative archiving project entitled Breath Library. Her most recent publication: Anna Nacher & Filip Jankowski, "Re-writing histories of colonization in video games: the case of Elizabeth LaPensée". Images. The International Journal of European Film, Performing Arts and Audiovisual Communication, 29(38), June 2021, 123-141.
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Morgan Sammut
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Morgan Sammut is a graduate of Mount Holyoke College, with a degree in English and a minor in Computer Science. Their interests include electronic literature, video games, and hybrid writing. Currently, they are working on finishing two interactive fiction projects: one inspired by Emily Short's Galatea and one based on Mary Shelley's Frankenstein.
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Keith S. Wilson is an Affrilachian Poet and a Cave Canem fellow. He is a recipient of an NEA Fellowship, an Elizabeth George Foundation Grant, and an Illinois Arts Council Agency Award, and has received both a Kenyon Review Fellowship and a Stegner Fellowship. His book, Fieldnotes on Ordinary Love (Copper Canyon), was recognized by the New York Times as a best new book of poetry.
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