Gloss on The Way We Live Now, What is to be Done?
Stefanie Boese
September 8, 2007
P:nth-child(45)
Bethany Nowviskie of the University of Virginia introduces the COLLEX tool, a “COLL-ection” and “EX-hibition” of online images and interlinked texts in her white paper, which is available as an “enfolded” text on ebr.
Gloss on The Way We Live Now, What is to be Done?
Stefanie Boese
September 8, 2007
P:nth-child(54)
Kenneth J. Saltman, writing in the Technocapitalist thread, dicusses Michael Milken’s efforts to privatize education, which, Saltman argues, are aimed at “transforming public education into an investment opportunity for the wealthy,” endangering the foundation of a democratic society.
Gloss on SURFACE TO SURFACE, ASHES TO ASHES (REPORTING TO U)
Lori Emerson
July 21, 2007
P:nth-child(4)
ebr itself is an ongoing experiment in creating a generative, user-friendly interface. ebr has documented the conversations (by Anne Burdick, Joseph Tabbi, Mark Amerika) underlying the launches of various interfaces over the years. ebr itself is an ongoing experiment in creating a generative, user-friendly interface. ebr has documented the conversations (by Anne Burdick, Joseph Tabbi, Mark Amerika) underlying the launches of various interfaces over the years. Lorne Falk also writes for ebr on the affective interface and Linda Brigham on the interface as a form of artificial life.
Gloss on The King and I: Elvis and the Post-Mortem or A Discontinuous Narrative in Several Media (On the Way to Hypertext)
Lori Emerson
July 21, 2007
P:nth-child(30)
Larry McCaffery writes of Elvis as a montage-artist in his ebr essay “White Noise/White Heat” on the postmodern in rock ‘n roll: he instinctively combined various American musical idioms (black gospel, blues and rhythm-and-blues, and white country-and-western) into a distinctively new form. Larry McCaffery writes of Elvis as a montage-artist in his ebr essay “White Noise/White Heat” on the postmodern in rock ‘n roll: he instinctively combined various American musical idioms (black gospel, blues and rhythm-and-blues, and white country-and-western) into a distinctively new form.
Gloss on On Hip-Hop, A Rhapsody
Lori Emerson
July 21, 2007
P:nth-child(21)
Echoing Jarrett’s claim for hip-hop as montage, Marcus Boon’s “Sublime Frequencies’ Ethnopsychedelic Montages” drives home to us that hip hop emerged out of the B-Boys’ taste for African polyrhythms purloined from old vinyl reshaped and engineered on turntables and mixers.