Terminal Announces The Launch Of "Browser Poems" By Xtine Burrough.

In Browser Poems, burrough has reinterpreted three classic works of 
literature from the 20th Century (“O Captain, My Captain”, “On the 
Road”, and “Waiting for You at the Mystery Spot”) using just two 
languages (HTML and CSS) in the browser as the primary agent of 
transformation. In the works, burrough is not interested in writing the 
foundational text for the poetic experience. Instead, her aim was to 
design a web user’s experience for the works. The works adhere to the 
confining graphic formatting rules of current web standards, and include 
text, hypertext, images, videos, and audio. In the 
language-image-browser redesign process, the meaning of the poems are 
affected as follows:

O Captain, My Captain
O BROWSER, MY BROWSER is a browser translation of Walt Whitman’s 1900 
poem, “O Captain, My Captain” from Leaves of Grass. In the original 
poem, the death of a ship’s captain is an allegorical reference to the 
death of U.S. president Abraham Lincoln. In this reinterpretation, the 
allegory shifts to the impending death of the web. Here, short clips of 
YouTube videos (all 24 found by a search on the site using keywords from 
each line of the poem) provide a background noise, or a context, to 
interfere with or aid the reading of the poem.

On The Road
In 2007 burrough created hand-made bags for City Lights Bookstore as a 
public art intervention to celebrate the 50th anniversary year of the 
publication of On The Road. The original manuscript was notoriously 
produced on a single scroll of paper (or, many papers taped to each 
another) before Viking Press published the manuscript in 1957. The 
complete text is rendered as a continuous page in the browser. However 
all instances of the word “road” have been replaced with the word “browser.”

Waiting For You at the Mystery Spot
Adrienne Rich’s “Waiting For You at the Mystery Spot” (2000) is part of 
her 1998-2000 collection, Fox, which earned Rich the 2003 Yale Bollingen 
Prize for American Poetry. The judges acknowledged her “continuous 
poetic exploration and awareness of multiple selves.” In this 
language-image-browser redesign, the “Mystery Spot” (a California 
alternative tourist destination for gravitational anomaly lovers of all 
ages) takes on new meaning, or multiple selves, as the location of 
virtual Easter eggs relating to Rich’s text.

About Terminal
Terminal is a space sponsored by the Department of Art and the Center of 
Excellence for the Creative Arts at Austin Peay State University to 
showcase and examine internet and new media art.

Link: http://www.TERMINALapsu.org/
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