Women in New Media
Sources in Art and
Technology

Resources:
Books, Papers and Portals

Resources:
New Media Works

Resources:
Projects and Organizations


Book Page on MIT Press
Book Table of Contents





























New Media Works


Music/Sound
Electronic Literature, New Media Narrative
Video/Film
Visual
Theater/Dance/Multimedia Performance


Music

Electronic Literature, New Media Narrative, Social Media Narrative

See also Early Web Works, 1994-1997

Video/Film

Visual

Theater/Dance/Multimedia Performance



Early Web Works, 1994-1997

Narrative


Collaborative Narrative


Visual















A supplemental resource
for Judy Malloy, ed.,
Women, Art and Technology
MIT Press, 2003

Reviews of Women, Art & Technology

"...A rich source of information about the women and works that have made media arts history -- or should."
Dene Grigar, American Book Review

"...many of the artists' papers gathered here stand as frank, revealing, and inspiring expositions of their work, and Judy Malloy is to be congratulated on an important compilation of materials from a most important field..."
- Sadie Plant, Tekka

"This is a phenomenally important volume." - Judith Hoffberg, Umbrella

"Judy Malloy's anthology Women, Art and Technology is a rare and welcome book. It is a collection of insiders' histories of a world that was only briefly glimpsed and that for the most part remained unrecorded. In the field of new media where obsolescence is the norm, the arrival of this exploration of the continuity of artistic vision and political concerns that have driven women's aesthetic experimentation with technology over the last few decades is a real gift..."
-- Carolyn Guertin, TrAce

"...The writings themselves serve to illustrate the breakdown of the barriers between art and technology by their presentation as a combination of technical report writing, artistic sensibility, and visual documentation. I came away from this book with a long list of further reading and websites to visit and a greater understanding of not only the role of the feminine in techno/art but of techno/art itself."
- - Jayne Fenton Keane, English Studies Forum

"....Perhaps most fascinating are the book's multifaceted observations about the symbiotic relationship of media such as modern dance, sound, video, and computer programming...."
- Geary Yelton, Electronic Musician