This article analyzes Ian Hatcher’s online and kinetic poem “⌰ (Total Runout)” (2015) from a point of view of a critique of corporate and governmental black boxing, at the level of its code, text, visual output, sound, and live performance. The multimodal poem is part of the Drone Pilot suite, and it is presented in different versions: as a web-based work, sound piece, and performance. It remixes appropriated text from a WikiLeaked manual by the UK Ministry of Defence, essays on artificial intelligence, and Hatcher’s own text. The overall versions of the work, understood as variable events, boldly problematize communication and cognitive processes in networks—whether they are implemented in computer systems by secret agencies or corporation...
Recent arguments made by proponents of mass surveillance have focused on the fact that the content o...
Through historical research on hypertextual, collaborative writing software and hardware in the 1960...
233 pagesCorporate actors increasingly use networked technology as a storytelling device, drawing on...
This article analyzes Ian Hatcher’s online and kinetic poem “⌰ (Total Runout)” (2015) from a point o...
The Black Box is explored as a tool of power and control. Originating as a problem-solving tool in e...
In the age of digital information, poetry and praxis are integrated with wireless technologies and h...
The borderland existing in contemporary digital technology is the unexplored terrain. Representing t...
This article explores themes of secrecy and monitoring in three works of experimental poetry publish...
International audience[Paper] Enrolled in the avant-garde of the 1950’s, digital poetry first assert...
This article investigates how codes and signals were employed in avant-garde poetry and art in the 1...
This article investigates how codes and signals were employed in avant-garde poetry and art in the 1...
This article investigates how codes and signals were employed in avant-garde poetry and art in the 1...
Howard Becker (1982) terms a cooperative network of people organized through and around joint knowle...
Kill Boxes addresses the legacy of US-sponsored torture, indefinite detention, and drone warfare by ...
This article investigates how codes and signals were employed in avant-garde poetry and art in the 1...
Recent arguments made by proponents of mass surveillance have focused on the fact that the content o...
Through historical research on hypertextual, collaborative writing software and hardware in the 1960...
233 pagesCorporate actors increasingly use networked technology as a storytelling device, drawing on...
This article analyzes Ian Hatcher’s online and kinetic poem “⌰ (Total Runout)” (2015) from a point o...
The Black Box is explored as a tool of power and control. Originating as a problem-solving tool in e...
In the age of digital information, poetry and praxis are integrated with wireless technologies and h...
The borderland existing in contemporary digital technology is the unexplored terrain. Representing t...
This article explores themes of secrecy and monitoring in three works of experimental poetry publish...
International audience[Paper] Enrolled in the avant-garde of the 1950’s, digital poetry first assert...
This article investigates how codes and signals were employed in avant-garde poetry and art in the 1...
This article investigates how codes and signals were employed in avant-garde poetry and art in the 1...
This article investigates how codes and signals were employed in avant-garde poetry and art in the 1...
Howard Becker (1982) terms a cooperative network of people organized through and around joint knowle...
Kill Boxes addresses the legacy of US-sponsored torture, indefinite detention, and drone warfare by ...
This article investigates how codes and signals were employed in avant-garde poetry and art in the 1...
Recent arguments made by proponents of mass surveillance have focused on the fact that the content o...
Through historical research on hypertextual, collaborative writing software and hardware in the 1960...
233 pagesCorporate actors increasingly use networked technology as a storytelling device, drawing on...