Carolyn Guertin
1 2019-08-12T12:39:55-07:00 Kathleen Zoller d12f5a19398157747ffcda98170a372b72a1ea00 33905 1 Carolyn Guertin plain 2019-08-12T12:39:55-07:00 Kathleen Zoller d12f5a19398157747ffcda98170a372b72a1ea00This page is referenced by:
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Contributors
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Book Contributors
Researcher and Author
Kathleen Zoller is an Undergraduate Researcher in the Electronic Literature Lab led by Dene Grigar. She is majoring in DTC with a focus in animation at Washington State University Vancouver. Funded by the Summer Mini-Grant from the College of Arts and Sciences at WSU Pullman, she has spent the summer of 2019 making the site available through the ELO Repository and her open-source Scalar platform book The Progressive Dinner Party Restored.Faculty Mentor
Dene Grigar is the Director of the Electronic Literature Lab and of The Creative Media and Digital Culture Program at Washington State University Vancouver. She is also former President of the Electronic Literature Organization. Her research focuses on the curation, creation, preservation, and criticism of Electronic Literature, having herself curated numerous exhibitions. She has authored 14 media works including “Fallow Field: A Story in Two Parts,” and multimedia performances such as “When Ghosts Will Die”. Additionally, she has written four books and over 50 articles regarding the field.
Videographer
Moneca Roath is currently an Undergraduate Researcher for the Electronic Literature Lab. She is pursuing a B.A. in Digital Technology and Culture with a minor in Film Studies. Moneca has a focus on video production and content creation, and will graduate in Spring 2020. She is also working as a Technical Assistant in the library on campus. When she is not at school/work, she is out traveling with friends or family, and is always ready for an adventure.
Collection Contributors
Journal Founder & Editor
Jennifer Ley founded Riding the Meridian in 1999, and was also featured as an artist in The Progressive Dinner Party. Ley has worked with a diverse range of media for over forty years with an interest in community building and social activism. Additionally, her work can be found in the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). Her poetry has been featured in websites and magazines including Salt River Review, Beehive, Poetry Magazine and Poetry Cafe, among other places.
Curator
Marjorie Coverley Luesebrink (M. D. Coverley) is a writer of hypermedia fiction and co-curator The Progressive Dinner Party. She is also a founding member of the Board of Directors of the Electronic Literature Organization and served as the Organization’s second president. Her works have been published in Cauldron and Net, Riding the Meridian, Beehive, The Iowa Review Web and more.Co-curator
Carolyn Guertin curated Assemblage: The Women’s Hypertext Gallery, which inspired the works featured in The Progressive Dinner Party. Guertin specializes in feminist literary avant-garde and electronic work, and has been the author of several books. Guertin has also been a member of the Electronic Literature Organization and served on the Organization’s Board of Directors.
The 39 Works | Title Page
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Introduction
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The Progressive Dinner Party is a collection of 39 works selected from Carolyn Guertin’s Assemblage, a showcase of new media art by female artists from around the world. The Assemblage contains works with a variety of genres, tones, schools and generations, though they all seek to use traditional narrative forms or language in innovative, non-sequential ways. But just as importantly, Assemblage also acts as a union of the languages, skills, visions, art, and voices of women, which were not often heard. At a time when women were rarely acknowledged for their participation in computer technology, the Assemblage was critical for featuring digital-born works in the 1990s for women who contributed to the art of writing during the earlier stages of the World Wide Web.
Celebrating 39 women selected from this collection, The Progressive Dinner Party presents many unique takes on electronic art and literature. These include popular works such as “my body: A Wunderkammer” by Shelley Jackson, and works that were previously lost, like “Light/Water” by Christy Sheffield Sanford. Other artists include Claire Dinsmore, Stephanie Strickland, Jennifer Ley, Sue Thomas and Lehan Ramsay. E-lit artists Carolyn Guertin and Marjorie Luesebrink chose these 39 authors to highlight various pioneering works of electronic literature during the momentous transition from print to digital media. This idea was inspired by Judy Chicago’s piece The Dinner Party, which celebrates the contribution of women to art throughout history. Included in Chicago’s work are important women like Susan B. Anthony, Virginia Woolf, Sacajawea, and Empress Theodora of Byzantium. Like Chicago’s piece, the goal of The Progressive Dinner Party is to preserve the memory of these impactful female digital artists and prevent them from being lost to history. This took the form of a virtual three-sided table with 39 place settings linking to different’ “plates,” each displayed in a theme particular to the artist being celebrated. The Progressive Dinner Party has received positive critical response from postmodern literary theorist N. Katherine Hayles and digital author Talan Memmott, both of whom have written essays and commentary regarding the piece. These essays are currently housed in the site for anyone to view.
The Progressive Dinner Party was published in Riding the Meridian in 1999, an online journal founded by Jennifer Ley that showcased 262 works produced by many well-known artists and writers from around the world. Riding the Meridian was collected in the ELO repository in 2019. The repository contains metadata of over 3000 works from 22 collections of electronic literature owned or managed by ELO. The journal is valued for being one of the earliest spaces on the internet for sharing new forms and approaches of creative expression that were made accessible to all. Among these works were Mark Amerika’s Grammatron, Bobby Arellano’s Sunshine ‘69, Strickland’s The Ballad of Sand and Harry Soot, and Talan Memmott’s Lexia to Perplexia.
Although a number of the works within The Progressive Dinner Party can still be found on the web, many others link externally to sites that no longer exist, were missing media, don’t function in modern browsers, or all the above. As time goes on, more of these works are lost-- sometimes for good (such as Diana Slattery’s Glide, a gorgeous multimedia piece reflecting the fluidity of language and storytelling.) Many of the women in The Progressive Dinner Party helped revolutionize and broaden the field of electronic art and literature. And unless preserved, these 39 pieces would no longer be accessible. Therefore, the goal of my project is to keep these works alive so that the study of women’s early contributions to electronic literature are available to the public.
To accomplish this task, I used Rhizome’s Webrecorder archiving tool to capture their performance and functionality by converting the pages to .WARC files. To locate missing works, I would either use the Wayback Machine or seek it out in other locations, such as the author’s website or in online journals. If the files could not be found, Dene Grigar, my faculty mentor and Director of the Electronic Literature Lab, and I contacted the artist for a link to the work or for the local files. A spreadsheet was made to keep track of links, creator names and contacts, and other relevant metadata I found to aid my research. I then put my findings into this Scalar book, which was chosen due to being multimedia and interactive in nature like The Progressive Dinner Party. I also wanted the work to be open-source and easily accessible as time went on. Scalar is made with non-proprietary software and code (such as HTML, CSS and JavaScript), making its lifespan much longer than if it were made with other tools. In addition to converting the 39 works to .WARC files and creating a book regarding the project, I also updated The Progressive Dinner Party website with the new links generated by the Webrecorder. The website can be found at the following link to the Electronic Literature Repository, which collects and manages online journals, works of electronic literature, and other digital materials for preservation and public accessibility: http://elo-repository.org/progressive-dinner-party/index.htm
It should be noted that along with the 39 artists, several other key people were involved with the original site’s creation. Carolyn Guertin devised and curated The Progressive Dinner Party site based on her collection Assemblage: The Women’s Hypertext Gallery. Her work skeleton sky: a millennium poem is also featured in both sites. With a focus on feminist literary avant-garde and electronic work, she had created Assemblage for trAce Online Writing Centre, a digital archive of international new media art by women on the World Wide Web. She has written several books, including Digital Prohibition: Piracy and Authorship in New Media Art and three other textbooks regarding digital media. She has taught at universities in Canada, Europe, and the United States. Guertin has also been a member of the Electronic Literature Organization and served on the Organization’s Board of Directors.
Another important contributor is Marjorie Coverley Luesebrink (M. D. Coverley) who co-curated The Progressive Dinner Party. A writer of hypermedia fiction, she is also a founding member of the Board of Directors of the Electronic Literature Organization and served as the Organization’s second president. She has been writing digital-born fiction since 1995, which has been published in Cauldron and Net, Riding the Meridian, Beehive, The Iowa Review Web and more. Luesebrink has also written critical articles regarding e-lit and worked as editor for Word Circuits, The Blue Moon Review, Inflect, and Riding the Meridian.
Ley not only founded Riding the Meridian, she was also featured as an artist. She also created, co-founded and edited the poetry journal Perihelion in 1998, and hypertext poetry and graphics site The Astrophysicist’s Tango Partner Speaks in 1996. Ley has worked with a diverse range of media for over forty years with an interest in community building and social activism. Her work can be found in the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). She has worn many hats including artist, filmmaker, hypertext writer, and editor. This wide array of skills is partially owed to her schooling, which have earned her a B.S. in Art Education, studio concentration in ceramics and photography from the University of Wisconsin Stout, a background in film production from NYU, and post graduate experience in ceramics and oil painting. Her poetry has been featured in websites and magazines including Salt River Review, Beehive, Poetry Magazine and Poetry Cafe, among other places.
Talan Memmott wrote a comprehensive essay of commentary on The Progressive Dinner Party (specifically on the nature of web-specific hypermedia and hypertext literature), which the site includes. Having a background in electronic writing and digital art, Memmott has shared his extensive knowledge in universities around the globe including the University of Bergen, University of California Santa Cruz, Rhode Island School of Design, the Georgia Institute of Technology, the Blekinge Institute of Technology in Karlskrona, Sweden, and at Winona State University. Memmott obtained a PhD in Interaction Design/Digital Rhetoric and Poetics from Malmö University in Sweden, and an MFA in Literary Arts and Electronic Writing from Brown University, Rhode Island.
N. Katherine Hayles also offered her commentary on The Progressive Dinner Party, sharing her thoughts on how the term “open-work” could be used to describe electronic pieces such as those contained in the collection. Hayles is a prominent literary critic and theorist who writes and teaches on the relations of science, literature, and technology. Her insights come from a background in the sciences and in writing, having received her M.S. in Chemistry from the California Institute of Technology in 1969 and her Ph.D in English Literature from the University of Rochester in 1977. Over time, Hayles has focused her writings on electronic textuality and literature, posthumanism, technocriticism, and American postmodern literature. Additionally, Hayles has shared her teachings at the University of Iowa, University of Missouri-Rolla, the California Institute of Technology, Dartmouth College, and the University of California, Los Angeles.Critical Resources
About. http://nkhayles.com/about.html. Accessed 4 Sept. 2019.
Assemblage: The Women’s New Media Gallery. 3 June 2001, https://web.archive.org/web/20010603193138/http://trace.ntu.ac.uk/traced/guertin/assemblage.htm.
Brooklyn Museum: The Dinner Party by Judy Chicago. https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/exhibitions/dinner_party. Accessed 4 Sept. 2019.
Carolyn Guertin’s Home Web. 14 Oct. 2000, https://web.archive.org/web/20001014035957/http://www.ualberta.ca/~cguertin/Guertin.htm.
Jennifer Ley -- Online Resume. http://www.heelstone.com/resume/. Accessed 4 Sept. 2019.
M.D. Coverley/Marjorie Coverley Luesebrink. https://califia.us/about.htm. Accessed 4 Sept. 2019.
Progressive Dinner Party. http://www.heelstone.com/meridian/templates/Dinner/dinner1.htm. Accessed 4 Sept. 2019.
TalanMemmott. http://talanmemmott.info/. Accessed 4 Sept. 2019.Dedication | Using the Webrecorder