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BIOBIBLIOGRAPHY
Gregory L. Ulmer, Professor of English and Media Studies at the University of Florida, is the author of Heuretics: The Logic of Invention (Johns Hopkins, 1994); Teletheory: Grammatology in the Age of Video (Routledge, 1989); Applied Grammatology: Post(e) Pedagogy from Jacques Derrida to Joseph Beuys (Johns Hopkins, 1985). In addition to two other monographs and a textbook for writing about literature, Ulmer has authored some fifty articles and chapters exploring the shift in the apparatus of language from literacy to electracy. His media work includes two video tapes in distribution (one with Paper Tiger Television, the other with the Critical Art Ensemble). He has given invited addresses at international media art conferences in Helsinki, Sydney, Hamburg, Halifax and Nottingham, as well as at many sites in the United States. He teaches in the Media and Communications program of the European Graduate School, Saas-Fee/Switzerland. Ulmer's internet experiments are organized around the problematic of electronic monumentality a long-term project concerned with the mutation of the public sphere in electracy and the consequences for American national identity. Ulmer teaches in the Networked Writing Environment (NWE), featuring web design as a medium of learning. His current projects include two book-length studies: Miami Miautre: Mapping the Virtual City (co-authored with the Florida Research Ensemble), and Internet Invention: From Literacy to Electracy. |
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