The Electronic Literature Organization (ELO) is a nonprofit organization "established in 1999 to promote and facilitate the writing, publishing, and reading of electronic literature".[1] It hosts annual conferences, awards annual prizes for works of and criticism of electronic literature, hosts online events and has published a series of collections of electronic literature.
History
Founding and early years (1999-2002)
The ELO was founded in 1999 in Chicago by Scott Rettberg, Robert Coover, and Jeff Ballowe. Rettberg took the role as CEO, and Ballowe was president. In a book chapter about this early phase, Rettberg describes the first three years as a "turbulent and exciting period".[2]
An article in the Los Angeles Times describes the first reading organised by the ELO in July 2000, "a recent evening at the home of Microsoft executive Richard Bangs", with "trays of light finger food and delicately chilled Chardonnay" with "guests from high-tech east side Seattle mingled with representatives of the old-guard arts establishment and half a dozen writers of new fiction who had come to read from their work".[3]
The new organization was able to ride the excitement of the tech industry during the dot-com bubble, but also suffered from the subsequent crash.[2]
Transition to academic hosts (2002-2008)
The ELO had early successes in obtaining funding from individuals in the technology industry and the Ford Foundation (which funded the Electronic Literature Symposium at UCLA in 2002) and the Rockefeller Foundation (which funded work on the Electronic Literature Directory).[2] However, the dot com crash made funding dry up, and despite some local funding in Chicago, the organization had to transition from having full-time staff and an office to being hosted by universities. In 2001 the ELO moved to UCLA, supported by the English department.[2]Marjorie Luesebrink became president, N. Katherine Hayles was faculty advisor, and Jessica Pressman was the managing director.[2] The organization has since been hosted by universities, including the University of Maryland, College Park in 2006 where it was supported by the Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities (under the direction of Matthew Kirschenbaum), and MIT under the leadership of Nick Montfort. The ELO is currently hosted at York University, Toronto, Canada, under the leadership of Caitlin Fisher,[4] marking the first time this international organization has moved its headquarters outside of the United States.
2008-present
Since the 2007 conference, the ELO has grown annually and by 2015 was gathering hundreds of people at each of its conferences.
The ELO holds annual conferences that include both scholarly presentations and exhibitions and performances of electronic literature. The ELO website contains an archive of past conference websites.[10]
ELO Conferences
Year
Theme
Location
2002
State of the Arts Symposium
Los Angeles, California
2007
The Future of Electronic Literature
College Park, Maryland
2008
Visionary Landscapes
Vancouver, Washington
2010
ELO_AI: Archive & Innovate
Providence, Rhode Island
2012
Electrifying Literature: Affordances and Constraints
Overcoming Divides: Electronic Literature and Social Change[16]
Coimbra, Portugal
Publications
The Electronic Literature Directory[17] is a database of works of electronic literature.
Two reports on the preservation of electronic literature were published in 2004 and 2005 by the ELO as part of the Preservation, Archiving, and Dissemination (PAD) project.[18][19][20]
A book series called Electronic Literature with Bloomsbury.[21]
Pathfinders, a documentation of the experience of early digital literature.[22]
Electronic Literature Collections
The ELO has curated and edited four volumes of electronic literature.[23][24][25]
Volume 2 (February 2011) Tim Wright explains that "the process of gathering, archiving and tagging the works to make them more easily available to a wider audience, also freezes (necessarily) what may have been otherwise ephemeral or in situ."[27]
Volume 4 (June 2022). ELC4 presents the largest and most diverse group yet of elit authors writing in Afrikaans, Ancient Chinese, Arabic, Catalan, Chinese, Danish, Dutch, English, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Indonesian, isiXhosa, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Mezangelle, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Setswana, Simplified Chinese, Slovak, South African Sign Language, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish, Yoruba[30]
Awards
The 2001 Electronic Literature Awards
In 2001 the ELO announced the Electronic Literature Awards, with a $10,000 prize (funded by ZDNet) for the best work of fiction and the best work of poetry.[31][32] 163 works were submitted, and each was reviewed by at least three people on the board, after which the highest scoring works were passed on to judges Larry McCaffery and Heather McHugh.[2] Rettberg notes that the diversity of works submitted and shortlisted was "an eye-opener (..) in terms of what I might consider 'fiction' and 'poetry' to be in the e-lit context'.[2]
In 2001, These Waves of Girls by Caitlin Fisher won the fiction prize and windsound by John Cayley won the poetry prize. The excitement of the era can be felt in an interview by the cable television channel TechTV with Fisher after the awards gala in New York.[33]
ELO Awards (2014-)
After a pause due to a lack of funding, the ELO Awards were rekindled in 2014, and since then an annual award has been given to the best literary work and the best work of scholarship on electronic literature.[34] Each award comes with a $1000 stipend.
Robert Coover Award for a Work of Electronic Literature
This award honors the year’s best work of electronic literature, of any form or genre.
Robert Coover Award for a Work of Electronic Literature
Everest Pipkin, Anonymous Animal. Runner-up: "The (m)Otherhood of Meep (the bat translator)" by Alinta Krauth
Honorable Mention: "The Decameron 2.0" by The Decameron Collective
2024
Halim Madi, Borderline. Runner-up: "Seeing" by Margot Machado
Honorable Mentions: "Exocolony" by Lee Tusman; "Unboxing: Mrs. Wobbles and the Tangerine House" by the Marino family; "VideoDreams" by Fernando Montes Vera
N. Katherine Hayles Award for Criticism of Electronic Literature
This award honors the best work of criticism of electronic literature of any length.
N. Katherine Hayles Award for Criticism of Electronic Literature
Lai-Tze Fan (editor) “Critical Making, Critical Design,” Issue 01 of The Digital Review[35]
2023
Lyle Skains, Neverending Stories: The Popular Emergence of Digital Fiction. Runner up: Opera aperta: Italian Electronic Literature from the 1960s to the Present" by Emanuela Patti. Honorable mention: “Girl Online” by Joanna Walsh
2024
Hannes Bajohr, "Artificial and Post-Artificial Texts: On Machine Learning and the Reading Expectations Towards Literary and Non-Literary Writing." Runner up: "Machine Mimesis: Electronic Literature at the Intersection of Human and Computer Imitation," by Malthe Stavning Erslev.
Honorable mentions: Alessandro Ludovico, Tactical Publishing: Using Senses, Software, and Archives in the Twenty-First Century; Simone Murray: “The Short Story in the Age of the Internet.”
This award honors a visionary artist and/or scholar who has brought excellence to the field of electronic literature and has inspired others to help create and build the field.
This award "honors an independent spirit: a writer, artist, researcher, programmer, designer, performer, or hybrid creator who does not adhere to a conventional path but creates their own and in so doing makes a singular contribution to the field of electronic literature."
^ abcdefgRettberg, Scott (2015). "Developing an Identity for the Field of Electronic Literature: Reflections on the Electronic Literature Organization Archives". Electronic literature communities. Scott Rettberg, Patricia Tomaszek, Sandy Baldwin. Morgantown, WV. pp. 81–112. ISBN978-1-940425-99-3. OCLC944133627.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)