Sunday, March 29, 2009

Another Ani-Poetry Moment


 

Ani-poetry: just another way to say animated poetry (less syllables!)

Of course, "30 Days of Rain" isn't enough to keep animated poetry indoors.

We continue with Ana Maria Uribe's Anipoemas.

Like this one: Bubbles

    Where it could be obvious what you should see on the screen, but the forms aren't really just bubbles. You would almost expect to see bubbles, but actually the actions of the bubbles occur.

The forms are letters, and words in Spanish:

    "Burbujas" (Bubbles)

    "Explotan" (Explode)

    

Even though it isn't so colorful, and musical as "30 Days of Rain"; Uribe's anipoems seduce a second thought when you first encounter them. The entire background of the site is black save for the animated poem with black typewriter font blinking and moving. Questions such as "Why do bubbles explode?" Or, "Why is that significant?" Couldn't the bubble just be a symbol for hopes/dreams that burst once we let them go, just as we blow the bubbles away in their creation?

Or another that makes you ask:

Separation

By Annie Abrahams

This can be viewed in either English or French; though I think it sounds more beautiful in French than in English. It is a poem that you have to click for all the text to come out. [Believe me I clicked and stared at the screen for awhile before I read the fine text] The blank screen will do something if you click on it. Separation is felt in the poem itself; where does the "lonely soul" connect with reader's computer usage? Pain and anxiety and loneliness all related to a visit to the hospital (if you go alone). The text seems to stop at usage, but then there are other actions that the writer demands from the reader. It's a poem that you want to click fast to absorb all the text, but as soon as you start hyper clicking; the screen returns to a slow message to basically click slowly. And slowly you are allowed to follow the rest of the text. There is a lot of "you" in her message, but it's implied that "you" is not just the indifferent observer, but someone specific to the speaker.

So if you need a lesson in patience, then "Separation" will teach.

Will teach you caress yourself, to take courage, to do a number of things that aren't commonly thought of; and of course, if you rush, you'll be slowly scolded.

When you sit a computer, do you tense and race through? Should- can you slowly take in the input and pause, click softly and respond?


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Who’s Afraid of Animated Poetry?

You won't be after you see this

Yes, we are leaving our dear friend, Hypertext Poetry for animated poetry. We begin a new chapter in our journey into e-poetry!

Animated Poetry [or anipoetry for short]

  • The title would be self explanatory though it's not really: animation is more like a televised poem
  • Or, the poem moves, the words, the images, there could even be music
  • And it is mostly symbolic or very abstract; it leaves you and I-the audience/readers to interpret or connect the dots on the meaning behind the parts of the poem.
  • like most e-poetry, it varies in what it is; although I have tried to steer away from this: many pieces of e-poetry cross themselves-it could be hypertext with animation like John Hegley's "What a Poem's Not" [why? The hyperlinked words at the end of the lines activate the animations on the right of the poem]

Example of the Post: "30 Days of Rain"

  • Created by Travis Alber.
  • This is poem [or does it stretch the contents our above discussion?] is a beautiful, [ever had one of those-what does this button do moment? Yeah-this poem] content rich piece with music, images and reminds me of this [yes, I spent a lot of pre-DH time there].
  • Why 30 days of rain? Click on the calendar on the floor for each of the days on the calendar to find out. Each day has a different part of the poem.
  • One thing is for sure: Sylvia Plath definitely didn't see this one when she wrote: "But I remember what it said on one rejection slip: After a heavy rainfall, poems titled RAIN pour in from across the nation"
    • Of course, Alber didn't just write one day-it's 30 days of rain!

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Where have you gone New E-Poetry?

This is a brief pause in our current dialogue to ponder the title question: Why aren't there any more recent e-poetry in the last few years?

Maybe this question is being truncated already by an underground effort to mainstream e-poetry? I'd like to think so, but the question keeps rising in my head when I look at collections of e-poetry with dates of 2004 or older.

I admit, I had some expectations for the e-poetry world. The concept seemed completely incredible and fascinating. It has real potential and many scholars believe this as well.

I decided to search through the net jungle and prove myself wrong. Yet, in the research I have completed for the blog itself… I want to say that Google search has some kind prank glitch, but this can't be the most recent or best matched listing.

And criticism or evaluation e-poetry can't be taking a break on this or this year

I think my argument is this: why isn't e-poetry much larger than a few well hidden links to a few authors. Perhaps this is just a transition phase. Is e-poetry acting out its teen rebellion by going underground?

Is there going to be an answer to all these questions?

No.

Or, not exactly; there is some current activity in the forefront for e-poetry: I [heart] E-Poetry

The Barcelona Festival is holding its 5th annual festival to celebrate digital poetry.

The best way to showcase this event is with the 2007 E-poetry festival: [click me!]

As you can click-see the festival has been and will be extremely digital friendly. American and other foreign universities have contributed in terms of papers or works that will be presented. This year they had over 120 works submitted to the festival for presentation.

Yet, despite this festival, there is barely more current information than courses at universities or other works [why not have a digital poetry convention in many other countries?]

We can argue about the accessibility of internet and its resources. Yes, the whole world isn't necessarily connected.

Yet with other areas or art in the internet much more developed…

[Wait-I just need a minute to update my Twitter/Facebook page]

E-poetry has hit a drag.

Perhaps E-poetry isn't as easy as updating FaceBook, or requires some more HTML elegance than MySpace when creating it. It may just be easier to grab a pen, paper, coffee, a muse and write a poem than to open up Notepad and/or Photoshop to create a dazzling digital work of art.


 


 


 


 

 

Monday, February 23, 2009

Ever Wanted Prufrock to be Sugar High?

Now I know that such a question would raise some eyebrows.

Yes, we're still stalking hypertext poetry, but with a slightly different example. Actually you may be relieved by recognizing T.S Eliot's poem, "The Love Song of J.Alfred Prufrock". Yet this hypertext version of the poem has links to images, text, and audio. Just think of reading the demanding text without having to flit through pages and pages of references! It allows for a more consistent read; you wouldn't just guess or gloss parts you might not understand to finish the poem. The interaction with the poem is enhanced by hearing the poet's speech as well as access to textual reference within the poem.

This example of hypertext is more along the lines of innovative reading of traditional poetry. Yet, still an intriguing way to create a dialogue between the reader and the poet, as well as another audience. The individuals who created this hypertext version choose what kinds of images reflect the poem's meanings and intent.


 


 

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

One Foot in the Door...


and Let the Clicks lead the way…

Now that we have an idea of what hypertext is, we are now going to go click happy in Mary Hedger’s

Now, if you clicked at the bottom of the last entry on the link you might think “ooo…a guide post…. are you trying to be funny?”

I chose this example because not only are you driven insane by the all the links –I mean, it is a one of kind example of hypertext. It is user friendly. Why? She has placed on the right hand side information and her own analysis of each poem in the sign posts. This is not highly typical in hypertext, let alone traditional poetry [unless you’re reading an annotated text]. It lends a much more personal and organized approach to hypertext [no, really check this one out]. It is organized chaos.

Also the graphics of this piece are actually manually drawn; they’re not just programmed structure. It gives it a completely different feel than just typed text.

So…where do we start?

Click.

Looking at the guidepost in the middle the word: HYPERTEXT appears in the middle of directions [Simplicity, Humanity, Prison, and Patience]

Hypertext is a series of hypertext poems.

· Hard Drive Human

· Patience

· Excuse Me

· Layer Love

· Prison Detail

· Limit

· Truth Comic

But rather than start at the beginning; we’ll start at the end.

Truth Comic

Introduction: When you click on Truth Comic there is a blurb on the side from Hedger about Truth Comic.

What kind of analysis could this poem require, as it is also a visual and user interactive art? There is no sense of “ah, it’s an Elizabethan sonnet!” there are words, images in a certain pattern with the intent of expression.

Hedger states: “instructions: seven pages linked by the red, blue and green big dots and cross, click to change the page. find these dots and crosses and other mouseover links by sliding the mouse over the page. there is reason in this madness! hypertext rocks!”-from “About Truth Comic"

This is where you notice that although hypertext may seem to be purely hyperlinked text/images in a seemingly chaotic order, there is a lot to chew on with just one page.

So you may want to suspend your poetic convictions on traditional poetry to properly enjoy the artwork.

Once you find a way out of the first page, each page has a pattern in which you click to reveal writing, images or movement. There is an implication to each. Much like a graphic novel, only it moves [I can only compare this to the moving pictures in Harry Potter].

Let’s look at the first page ( Print outs are useless; you lose the intent and confusion):

By passing the mouse over the page different blocks with the colors red, white, and blue appear. Even passing over the written words changes the words themselves.

You may think “Oh good, there’s words.” But unlike normal poetry there are few words and we have to wonder how do they contribute to the theme of the poem, why are there colors and the ram [couldn’t that be a symbol of masculinity, and what would that have to do with a female author]? What does it mean when she writes: “Give yourself time to think when you need it”?

Life is conveyed as an abstract complexity.

My sense when I first went through the poem, and the subsequent pages of it, is that it appears like an adult writing on a kid’s notebook. Or a teenager who knows over and over what the rules are in “society” and has decided to distort them and put her own thoughts. There are themes of love and sexuality, and freedom to think and to some extent a sense of patriotism. You don’t get the same personal interaction with the author in this abstract manner with a traditional poem. There is a more microscopic approach to each article in the pages. Anything is up for game if you’re trying to deeply analyze it.

I can only imagine what Allen Ginsberg would hyperlink or move around in “Howl”.




Wednesday, February 4, 2009

And no, the text isn't on a sugar high.


 


 

[Although you may think so after seeing some samples of hypertext poetry.]


 

Our next step into the unknown-I mean e-poetry- is hypertext poetry.


 

Yeah, but really, what is it?


 


 

[BoRinG-Useful] Definition: It is text arranged on the screen in a certain order; it will include hyperlinks to other sites with visual/audio media or other pages that will enrich the meaning of the poem.


 


 

Hypertext is particularly fun. My first experience with hypertext [Millennium Buggery by Ernesto Sarezale) was filled with rainbow colored bars across the screen and completely random links to websites (some that don't exist anymore-a peeve!). I suppose the most exciting event is not a PowerPoint animation of text at 1 AM.





Riding the Meridian explores how hypertext is not only poetry and its effects[oh yes, there is more]. It is also a new medium for prose. But forget about prose. What hypertext has done to poetry is that is interactive; you don't just sit there and read, you have to click first. A writer in this medium is forced to much more selective in what content is displayed, and the reader taken for the ride.


 

But, enough talk: let's click!


 

[click me!]


 

[This will lead you to a hypertext site by Mary Hedger. Where you click on the letter spelling H-Y-P-E-R-T-E-X-T. On the left hand side you will be linked to the poem; on the right hand side you get a small blurb about the poem ]


 

In the next installment: Hypertext Poetry by Mary Hedger [We're going to click into the deep!] and other examples of hypertext poetry.


 

Monday, January 26, 2009

The Rough Cut: What is digital poetry?


What is the first image that shows up in when you think poetry? Is it a sonnet written hundreds years ago? Well, you can press delete on that image right now because today, poetry isn't just neatly published words on your textbook. Digital poetry is two small words to describe the underground wave of poetry that you can experience through images, audio and words. It is also known as e-poetry.


Even though it has been known that poetry isn’t just a form of writing but an art that is spoken; it has adapted to the digital media where it is mobile and easily accessible. You could say it is has taken the “open-source” passage like OpenOffice.

Digital poetry began in the late 1950s. Long before personal computers, digital poetry had become a stable and accepted form of expression.

Yet, with the advent of personal computers, more innovation occurred. For example, in the 1980s Hypertext emerged as a form of poetry where text is interconnected in specific design, not necessarily linear.


Like:


(Source: Ernesto Sarezale)




Or Like This:




hymns of the drowning swimmer

Copyright © Jason Nelson




Certainly not your average poem in the works here.

Now, is there a clear definition of digital poetry? It's own definition evolved with the dynamic form. What some define as digital poetry, now is evaluated by other critics as "Poetry and New Media". Which in most basic terms, is a very similar classification. For the purposes of this blog, we shall just encounter this form as poetry innovated by computer technology.