Interview with
Noah
Wardrip-Fruin 1. Agent
Digital
Literature
The
New Media
Reader
(with Nick Montfort; MIT Press 2003) and
First
Person: New Media as Story, Performance, and
Game
(with Pat Harrigan; MIT Press 2004) (
review).
As an author of digital literature Noah
Wardrip-Fruin has become well known for Gray
Matters (together with Chris Spain, Kirstin
Allio, and Michael Crumpton), a fiction embedded in
images of a human body, and
The
Impermanence
Agent
(together with Adam Chapman, Brion Moss, and Duane
Whitehurst). Both works were part of the Guggenheim
Museum New York's 2001 "Brave New Word" program.
More recent works of digital literature include
Talking
Cure
and
Screen.
Noah Wardrip-Fruin is Traveling Scholar at Brown
University. Roberto Simanowski talked with him
about disappearing, instrumental, fixed, and
responsive text - about text-games, word pictures,
critical technical practices, and the future of
digital literature.
2. Screen
3. Talking Cure
4. The future of digital literature and its
curricula
dichtung-digital