Gregory Ulmer

Gregory Leland Ulmer (born December 23, 1944)[1] is a professor in the Department of English at the University of Florida (Gainesville) and a professor of Electronic Languages and Cybermedia at the European Graduate School in Saas-Fee, Switzerland.[2]

Gregory Ulmer
BornDecember 23, 1944
NationalityAmerican
Scientific career
FieldsEnglish, Media Studies
InstitutionsUniversity of Florida

Career

From 1972 to 1977 Ulmer worked as an assistant professor in the Humanities Department of the University of Florida and became the Acting Chair of the department in 1979. He received tenure in 1977, and he became the co-director of the Institute for European & Comparative Studies (1987–1990), and the director of the film studies program (1986–1989).[3]

Many of Ulmer's theories grow out of his home-spun "puncepts" like textshop, choragraphy, applied grammatology, mystory, heuretics, and post(e)-pedagogy.[4] His explorations into what he refers to as an "anticipatory consciousness" designed to utilize the force of intuition as a way to invent emergent forms of knowledge, are methodologically remixed by Ulmerian disciples all over the world.

One such project to grow out of Ulmer's magical mystery tour is Illogic of Sense: The Gregory L. Ulmer Remix,[5] an e-book publication that highlights how Ulmer's seminal work has been central to contemporary thinking on the future of writing and new forms of hybridized "digital rhetoric." Published by the Alt-X Press, which was founded by Ulmer's former student turned artist and writer Mark Amerika, the ebook is said to have finally fulfilled the long-promised potential of online publishing to use stimulating visual arrangement, media hybridization, and typographical ingenuity to blur the distinction between publication, exhibition, and design performance, which further brings to mind Ulmer's own self-consciously titled book "Internet Invention."

Academic interests

Ulmer's work focuses on hypertext, electracy and cyberlanguage and is frequently associated with "emerAgency," "choragraphy," "mystoriography," heuretics, and concept avatar. Following his motto (from the Japanese poet Matsuo Bashō) "not to follow in the footsteps of the masters, but to seek what they sought," Ulmer developed a mode for research and pedagogy that does for electracy what the argumentative essay (paper) does for literacy.

He is the author of several books: Illogic of Sense: The Gregory Ulmer Remix; Applied Grammatology: Post(e)-Pedagogy from Jacques Derrida to Joseph Beuys; Teletheory: Grammatology in the Age of Video; Heuretics: The Logic of Invention; Internet Invention: From Literacy to Electracy; and Electronic Monuments. .[6] He has also published numerous articles and maintains a personal website and blog, Heuretics.

gollark: No, you should tell everyone about the quadratic number field sieve.
gollark: I contain -19071821895 hydrogen ions, yes.
gollark: I too love breaking the entire site for users with JS disabled.
gollark: Some of them are, but regardless, a lot of the time they are used on *news websites* and *personal sites* and such, which could literally just be a folder of static HTML and images with maybe some progressive enhancement JS.
gollark: Because they're used in places where HTML is *actually fine*.

See also

References

  1. Contemporary Authors Online, s.v. "Gregory L(eland) Ulmer." Accessed March 3, 2008.
  2. Gregory Ulmer Archived 2010-04-21 at the Wayback Machine. Faculty page at European Graduate School with Biography, bibliography, articles and web resources. Retrieved May 14, 2010
  3. "Ulmer Online CV" (PDF). Ulmer Online CV. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 September 2011. Retrieved 13 August 2011.
  4. Ulmer, Gregory (2005). Electronic Monuments. University of Minnesota Press. pp. 231.
  5. Darren Tofts and Lisa Gye, eds., Illogic of Sense: The Gregory L. Ulmer Remix (Boulder, CO: Alt X Press, 2007).
  6. Ulmer. "Faculty page". University of Florida. Retrieved 13 August 2011.
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