-- TIR-W Volume 9 no. 2
July 2008 Instruments and Playable Text: Stuart Moulthrop
Under Language: Stuart Moulthrop
Concerto for Narrative Data: Judy Malloy
activeReader: Elizabeth Knipe
So Random, PiTP: Shawn Rider
riverIslandQT: John Cayley
The Purpling: Nick Montfort
-- TIR-W Volume 9 no. 1
August 2007
Multi-Modal Coding: Jason Nelson, Donna Leishman, and Electronic Writing
Interviews: Jason Nelson, Donna Leishman
Biographical Background
Reception | Role of the Reader
Interface
Work Process
Electronic Literature Community
Future Work
Secrets
Space | State
Connect Digital | Material Games
Potentials of the Field
Essays:
The Artists on Each Other's Work
Talan Memmott's Commentary on Each Artist
Artworks:
Deviant
Leishman Site
Pandemic Rooms
Nelson Index
-- TIR-W, Volume 8 no. 3, September 2006
Interview with Dan Waber; Rita Raley
five by five; Dan Waber bio and Jason Pimble
TLT vs. LL; Ted Warnell
Interview with David Knoebel; Rita Raley
Heart Pole; David Knoebe
Interview with Aya Karpinska; Rita Raley
mar puro; Aya Karpinska
The Nihilanth: Immersivity in a First-Person Gaming Mod; Sandy Baldwin
New Word Order (Video);Sandy Baldwin
Word Museum;William Gillespie
Interview with John Cayley; Sandy Rita Raley
Torus (Video); John Cayley
-- TIR-W, Volume 8, no. 2, June/July 2006
Editor's Introduction: Reconfiguring Place and Space in New Media Writing;
Scott Rettberg
Workspace is Mediaspace is Cityscape: An Interview with Nick Montfort on Book and Volume; Jeremy Douglass
Written on the Body: An Interview with Shelley Jackson; Scott Rettberg
Behind Fa ade: An Interview with Andrew Stern and Michael Mateas; Brenda Bakker Harger
Avant-Gaming: An Interview with Jane McGonigal; Scott Rettberg
Book and Volume; Nick Montfort
Fa ade; Michael Mateas and Andrew Stern
-- TIR-W, Volume 8, no. 1, February/March 2006
Editor's Introduction; Ben Basan
Sound Art, Art, Music; Douglas Kahn
Speaking Volumes; Brandon Labelle
Firebirds | Firebirds Berlin | Tongues of Fire; Paul DeMarinis
A Brief Lecture on Author/ity; Alexis Bhagat
Harvester; Ed Osborn
Honi | Tacotsubo; ADACHI Tomomi
-- TIR-W, Volume 7, no. 2, November 2005
10:01; Lance Olsen & Tim Guthrie
Pieces of Herself; Juliet Davis
The Bomar Gene; Jason Nelson
News from Erewhon; Millie Niss & Martha Deed
-- TIR-W, Volume 7, no. 1, August 2005
Ask me for the moon; John Zuern
CONSCIOUSNESS, LITERATURE, AND SCIENCE FICTION; Kathleen Ann Goonan
Buyways: Billboards, Automobiles, and the American Landscape; Mike Chasar
An interview with Diana Slattery; Dene Grigar
-- TIR-W, Volume 6, 2004
New Work; Niss, Deed & Daniels
Two Reviews; Tevis Thompson and Mike Chasar
Remembering Donald Justice; Steven Cramer
An interview & new work; David Silver, Jay David Bolter and Diane Gromala
An interview with Amy Sara Carroll; Heidi Bean
-- TIR-W, Volume 5, 2003
Afterwards; Judy Malloy
Digital Nature: the Case Collection version 2.0; Tal Halpern, Patrick F. Walter
Hacktivism? I didn't know the term existed before I did it; An Interview with Brian Kim Stefans; Giselle Beiguelman
Pax & An Interview; Stuart Moulthrop and Noah Wardrip-Fruin
An Interview with Margaret Stratton; Leslie Roberts
New Work & Reviews; Heidi Bean, Seth Thompson, Deena Larsen, geniwate, Pamela Gay
An Interview with John Cayley; Brian Kim Stefans
3 Proposals for Bottle Imps; William Poundstone
Self Portrait(s) [as Other(s)] & an Interview; Talan Memmott and M.D. Coverley
New work and an interview; Joseph Tabbi and Anthony Enns
Judd Morrissey & Lori Talley: An Interview & Essay; Jessica Pressman
-- TIR-W, Volume 4, 2002
Selected new poems; Ana Marie Uribe
ORIENT; YOUNG HAE CHANG HEAVY INDUSTRIES
Dervish Flowers; Nicolas Clausse and Brian Kim Stefans
New Digital Emblems; William Poundstone and Brian Kim Stefans
"Of Dolls and Monsters" An interview with Shelley Jackson; Rita Raley
Electronic Literature; Ravi Shankar, N. Kathrine Hayles, and Lisa Gitelman
Excerps from Mark Amerika's Oz Blog; Mark Amerika
Inflat-o-space; Jessica Irish
New Media Writing; Marc C. Marino, William Gillespie, and Dirk Stratton
Remembering My Life In/Of Words; Richard Kostelanetz
An Interview, an Essay, a New Media Project; Stephanie Strickland and Jaishree Odin
Our day with Jerry Springer; David Schneidermann
A loss is less and death is not so easy
Experiemental Literature was really the first kick: An interview with Scanner; Rebekah Farrugia
Crowds and Power; Jody Zellen and Thom Swiss
"Red, Black, White and Gray:" An Interview with Motomichi Nakamura;
YOUNG HAE CHANG HEaVY INDUSTRIES Bcc, Motomichi Makamura
-- TIR-W, Volume 3, 2001
Reach; Michael Joyce
Training Missions; Joe Amato
Everything after That; Martha Conway
Winter Break; Adrienne Eisen
-][select][test: co][deP][1][oetry]_; mez
The Impermanence Agent; Noah Wardrip-Fruin, a.c.chapman, Brion Moss, Duane Whitehurst
A Long Wild Smile; Jeff Parker
-- TIR-W, Volume 1, 1999 & Volume 2, 2000
Book of Job; Ted Warnell
The Universal Resource Locator; M.D. Coverly
Lexia to Perplexia; Talan Memmott
The Birth of Detachment; Jennifer Ley
The 12hr-ISBN-JPEG Project; Brad Brace
City of Bits; Thomas Swiss
Divine Mind Fragment Theater; Jim Andrews
Pronunciation: 'fut, or: A Tool and it's Means; c. allan dinsmore
Simple Harmonic Motion Or, Josephine Baker in the Time Capsule; Diane Greco
Reality Dreams, Scroll One; Joel Weishaus
Broken; Alan Sondheim and Barry Smylie
Mitosis; Kevin Fanning
The dear mr thomas letters; Kevin Fanning
A Fable of Words; Jeffery M. Bochman
Judy Malloy
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Contents:
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Bio
A magic realist whose work looks at the lives of artists, Judy Malloy works at the conjunction of poetry, hypernarrative, and information art.
Reviewed in Postmodern Culture, The New York Times Book Review, the Washington Post, Modern Fiction Studies (MFS), and The London Independent, among many others, her work has been exhibited/published internationally including Eastgate, The Iowa Review Web, Blue Moon Review, Sao Paulo Biennial, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Institute for Contemporary Art New Orleans, San Antonio Art Institute, P.P.O.W., The Los Angeles Institute for Contemporary Art, Heller Gallery at the University of California at Berkeley, the National Library of Madrid, The Houston Center for Photography, the Cleveland Institute of Art, Franklin Furnace, Visual Studies Workshop, San Francisco Art Institute, Tisch School of the Arts, Target Video, FLEFF Film Festival, Richmond Art Center, Heresies, Springer-Verlag, Tanam Press, Seal Press, E.P. Dutton, MIT Press, and the National Endowment for the Arts website.
A pioneer on the Internet and in electronic literature, Malloy wrote and programmed the seminal hyperfiction Uncle Roger. (first published on Art Com Electronic Network on the WELL in 1986) Created as an artists book and exhibited at the Richmond Art Center in 1989; published by Eastgate in 1993, Malloy's its name was Penelope has been called one of the classics of the "golden age" of hyperfiction by writer and critic Robert Coover.
As an arts journalist and arts advocate, she has worked most notably as the editor of Women, Art & Technology. (MIT Press, 2003) and as Editor of NYFA Current (formerly Arts Wire Current) an Internet-based National journal on social, economic, philosophical, and political issues affecting the arts and culture, sponsored by The New York Foundation for the Arts. She has also been instrumental in making the arts an integral part of the Internet. She founded the Arts Conference on the WELL, was the initial consultant for the Internet Yellow Pages, was a founding editor of the seminal Leonardo Electronic News, (which became Leonardo Electronic Almanac) introduced art students to the Internet in a series of summer workshops in the early 90's, and taught web design at the San Francisco Art Institute as a visiting faculty member. For over ten years she worked with Arts Wire and the New York Foundation for the Arts to bring artists, arts organizations, arts news, and art information onto the Internet.
In 1993, she was invited to Xerox PARC where she worked in CSL (Computer Science Laboratory) as the first artist in their artist-in-residence program. From 1993-1994, she created one of the first arts websites, Making Art Online, currently hosted on the website of the Walker Art Center. Created on the World Wide Web in 1994, Malloy's L0ve0ne, one of first web-based hyperfictions, was published on Eastgate's Web Workshop in 1995. In the ensuing years, Malloy created a body of new media literature that includes The Roar of Destiny Emanated from the Refrigerator, (1995-1999) Revelations of Secret Surveillance (2004-2006) and the hyperlibretto, The Wedding Celebration of Gunter and Gwen. (2007)
She believes that ideally, print literature and e-literature; sequential literature and hyperfiction; painting and new media; are parallel art forms where writers in each medium understand each other's vision and, as between poetry and fiction, sometimes move with ease between the mediums.
"My work looks at society in multiple ways -- ranging from the bawdy feminist take on office politics in 500 3X5 Cards and Other Stories to the poetic sorrow expressed in Ask for Sanctuary," she states. "For all societies -- from ancient Greek to contemporary times -- the freedom to make art in such diverse ways is of primary importance in the creation of vibrant and lasting cultures."
http://www.well.com/user/jmalloy/
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Featured Authors
Judy Malloy
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© The University of Iowa, 2004-2013 All works are copyright the individual artist |