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Pathfinders

Authors' and Contributors' Bios

Co-Authors
Dene Grigar is Director and Professor of the Creative Media & Digital Technology Program at Washington State University Vancouver, where she works in the area of electronic literature, emergent technology and cognition, and ephemera.  She is the author of  “Curlew," "Fallow Field:  A Story in Two Parts” and “The Jungfrau Tapes: A Conversation with Diana Slattery about The Glide Project,” and co-author of When Ghosts Will Die with Canadian multimedia artist Steve Gibson. Other projects like The "24-Hour Micro-Elit Project" experiments with micro-fiction and participatory literary art forms. She serves as Associate Editor for Leonardo Reviews and is President of the Electronic Literature Organization.  Her website is located at http://nouspace.net/dene.

Stuart Moulthrop is an award-winning designer of electronic fiction and art projects, a veteran teacher of computer game design, and author of multiply-anthologized writings on digital art and culture. From 1995-99 he served as Co-Editor of Postmodern Culture and still serves on its advisory board.  He was also a charter member of the Electronic Literature Organization in 1999, and currently serves on its Board of Directors.  He is Professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.


Research Assistants
Madeleine Brookman, who has served as Research Assistant on the project from fall 2014, is a junior in the Creative Media & Digital Culture Program at Washington State University Vancouver majoring in Digital Technologies & Culture.  She has been awarded the 2014-5 Auvril Fellowship and a 2015 College of Arts & Sciences Summer Mini-Grant. 

Amalia Vacca, who served as Research Assistant from summer 2013-fall 2014, is a graduate of the Creative Media & Digital Culture Program at Washington State University Vancouver.


Technical Support
Greg Philbrook is the Instructional and Technical Support Specialist for the Creative Media & Digital Culture Program at Washington State University Vancouver and a 2013 graduate of the program.  He is co-author with Grigar on "Curlew" and has contributed to Fort Vancouver Mobile, an app developed by Brett Oppegaard and Grigar for the Fort Vancouver National Historical Site.

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