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El. knyga: Opera aperta: Italian Electronic Literature from the 1960s to the Present

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  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Serija: Italian Modernities 39
  • Išleidimo metai: 27-Apr-2022
  • Leidėjas: Peter Lang International Academic Publishers
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781789978612
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  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Serija: Italian Modernities 39
  • Išleidimo metai: 27-Apr-2022
  • Leidėjas: Peter Lang International Academic Publishers
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781789978612
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«At last, here is a book written by an Italian about the homeopathic but essential role that Italian artists, and among them, important writers, have played to introduce the digital transformation to Italians. Long before government or business, and least of all educators, took notice, artists, as was their wont for centuries, were the first to reveal the potential of the new technologies. Emanuela Patti not only pays them a long overdue tribute, but along the way revisits with care and engaging style the key features of that transformation. A wonderful read!» (Professor Derrick de Kerckhove, University of Toronto)

«We were missing a systematic survey of e-literary arts in Italy. Emanuela Patti has filled that void. Indeed, her study is much more than a survey: it brilliantly connects semiotic theories of open textuality to the profound techno-cultural transformations of socio-political life from the 1960s to the present, from experimental writing to popular culture.» (Professor Massimo Riva, Brown University)

In 1962, Umberto Eco published Opera aperta, setting the ground for a new wave of creative experimentation across the arts and media. The concept of «open work» – informed by systems theory, cybernetics, relativism, pragmatism and other influential disciplines of the time – was used by Eco to reconsider the work of art as a site for interactivity, collaboration and intermediality. Starting from this perspective, this book reconstructs the history of Italian electronic literature, looking at creative practices across literature, electronic and digital media from the early days of computers to the social media age. It examines how Italian writers, poets, literary critics and intellectuals have responded to each phase of the digital revolution, by enacting «poetics of openness» and «politics of intermediality». Case studies include Nanni Balestrini, Gianni Toti, Italo Calvino, Caterina Davinio, Wu Ming, Michela Murgia, Francesco Pecoraro, Roberto Saviano, Tommaso Pincio, Fabio Viola, Fabrizio Venerandi and Enrico Colombini. In some cases, literary experimentation with new technologies has taken a clear polemical stance towards mass media, globalisation, information society and late capitalism, in order to challenge and/or reconfigure artistic or social ontologies. In others, digital technologies have been used to enhance and extend the parameters and «languages» of literature.



This book reconstructs the history of Italian electronic literature, looking at creative practices across literature, electronic and digital media from the early days of computers to the social media age. Topics include criticism of mass media, globalisation, information society and late capitalism as well as the enhancement of language itself.

List of figures
xiii
Preface xv
Acknowledgements xvii
Introduction 1(4)
PART I Open textuality from the Neoavanguardia to digital convergence
5(72)
Chapter 1 Opera aperta and the Italian Neoavanguardia
7(18)
Chapter 2 Italian electronic literature: The modernist poetics of `open works'
25(20)
Chapter 3 Ideological debates and the critical function of electronic literature
45(16)
Chapter 4 Digital storytelling from experimental writing to popular culture
61(16)
PART II The Italian `digital avant-garde': From mainframes to the Internet
77(72)
Chapter 5 The digital revolution in Italy
79(14)
Chapter 6 Generative literature: Nanni Balestrini's Tape Mark I (1961), Tristano (1966 and 2007), and Epreuves d'ecriture (1985)
93(16)
Chapter 7 Video poetry: Gianni Toti's poetronica (1980-1994)
109(12)
Chapter 8 Hypertext and interactive fiction: Italo Calvino and Enrico Colombini's Avventura nelcastello (1982)
121(12)
Chapter 9 Net poetry: Caterina Davinio from Karenina.it (1998) to GATES (2005)
133(16)
PART III The social media age
149(84)
Chapter 10 Digital convergence in Italy and the transformation of the Italian literary industry
151(16)
Chapter 11 Network criticism: Lit-blogs (2006--2019)
167(10)
Chapter 12 Reality blooks: Michela Murgia's Il mondo deve sapere (2006) and Francesco Pecoraro's Questa e alter preistorie (2008)
177(12)
Chapter 13 Collective distributed narratives: The Wu Ming Foundation (2006--2013)
189(10)
Chapter 14 Wiki novels: SIC's In territorio nemico (2013)
199(10)
Chapter 15 The social network novel: Tommaso Pincio's Panorama (2015) and Fabio Viola's I dirimpettai (1015)
209(10)
Chapter 16 Twitterature and Facebookature
219(14)
PART IV Post-digital experimentation: Creative coding and digital poetry
233(34)
Chapter 17 Interactive e-books: Enrico Colombini and Fabrizio Venerandi's Polistorie
235(10)
Chapter 18 Contemporary digital poetry
245(22)
Conclusion 267(6)
Bibliography 273(18)
Index 291
Emanuela Patti is Lecturer in Italian at the University of Edinburgh. Her research interests range across a variety of areas, including Italian literature and culture, media and cultural studies, digital cultures and digital humanities. She was part of the AHRC-funded collaborative project Interdisciplinary Italy 19002020: interart/intermedia, which supported the publication of this book. She is the author of Pasolini After Dante: the «Divine Mimesis» and the Politics of Representation (2016) and editor of a special issue of the Journal of Comparative Critical Studies titled Experimental Narratives: From the Novel to Digital Storytelling (2016), among other publications.