Digital
code as text. Can notions of text that were
developed without electronic texts in mind be
applied to digital code, and how does literature
come into play here?
My talk is based on
the general (yet disputable) assumption that the
theoretical debate of literature in digital
networks has shifted, just as the poetic practices
it is shaped after, from perceiving computer
technology solely as an extension of conventional
textuality (as manifest in such notions as
'hypertext', 'hyperfiction', 'hyper-/ multimedia')
towards paying attention to the very codedness of
digital systems themselves. Several phenomena may
serve as empirical evidence:
- The early focus
of conceptualist Net.art on the aesthetics and
politics of code;
- in turn, the impact of Net.art aesthetics on
experimental literature / poetry in the
Internet;
- the close affinity of Net.art with political
activism in the Internet;
- which itself increasingly affiliates itself with
an older, technical 'hacker' culture (of Chaos
Computer Club, 2600, etc.);
- the strong interest for (a) Free/Open Source
Software and (b) network protocol standardization
in all these camps;
- the fact that hacker aesthetics, Net.art
aesthetics, code aesthetics and network protocol
aesthetics have a tremendous impact on contemporary
writing in the Internet. (See the work of mez, Alan
Sondheim, Talan Memmott, Ted Warnell and others.)
I wll discuss how
"Codeworks" (Alan Sondheim) fit notions of text
that were crafted without digital code (and most
importantly: machine-executable digital code) in
mind and vice versa. Is it a coincidence for
example that, reflecting the low-level codes of the
Internet aesthetically, codeworks ended up
resembling concrete poetry? And, apart from
aesthetic resemblances, how do computer programs
relate to literature? Is that what is currently
being discussed as "Software Art" a literary
genre?
Since many of these
positions remain debatable, I would like to put up
questions in my presentation rather than give
answers.
full
paper
(given
at conference
p0es1s
- poetics of digital
text
)