This is a list of notable women writers of electronic literature.[1][2]

A

  • Annie Abrahams (born 1954), Dutch performance artist and writer, pioneering collective writing experiments
  • Mabel Addis (1912–2004), American writer, teacher and game designer
  • Laurie Anderson (1947) American artist, musician, electronic performance pioneer
  • Anna Anthropy (fl 2010), American video game designer and interactive fiction author
  • Kate Armstrong (fl 2000s), Canadian multimedia artist, experimental writer and curator

B

  • Pat Badani (fl. 2000s), Canadian-American digital artist and writer
  • Adriana de Barros (born 1976), Portuguese-Canadian illustrator, creator of interactive narratives and poems
  • Zoe Beloff (born 1958) American web serial creator
  • Caroline Bergvall (born 1962), French-Norwegian poet experimenting with sound art performances
  • Lillian-Yvonne Bertram (fl 2000s -2020s), American digital storyteller and poet
  • Carroll Parrott Blue (1943–2019), African American filmmaker, creator of hypermedia works combining film and text
  • Natalie Bookchin (fl 2000s), American new media artist
  • Laura Borràs i Castanyer (born 1970) Catalan electronic literature editor and critic (as well as a politician)
  • Amaranth Borsuk (born 1981), American poet experimenting with digital poetry
  • Mez Breeze (fl 1990s), Australian artist practicing digital poetry and electronic literature
  • Amy Briggs (born 1962), American video game developer involved in interactive fiction
  • Jennifer Brozek (born 1970), American author and game design writer
  • Nancy Buchanan (born 1946), American artist involved in digital performance art and fictional narrative
  • Oni Buchanan (Born 1975) American new media poet

C

  • J.R. Carpenter (born 1972), Canadian-British artist and writer active in digital literature
  • Lynda Clark (born 1981), British author, creator of interactive fiction
  • M.D. Coverley see Marjorie Luesebrink
  • Kathryn Cramer (born 1962), science fiction writer, critic and hypertext editor

D

E

  • Adrienne Eisen (born 1966, a.k.a. Penelope Trunk), American writer, blogger and entrepreneur
  • Lori Emerson (fl 2000s), new media preservationist and scholar
  • Astrid Ensslin (fl 2000s), German digital humanities scholar active in digital fiction and video games
  • Heid E. Erdrich (born 1963), Native American video poet
  • Tina Escaja (born 1965), Spanish-American writer and digital artist

F

G

H

J

K

  • Yael Kanarek (born 1967), Israeli-American internet artist and writer
  • Jayne Fenton Keane (fl 200s), Australian multimedia poet
  • Lisbeth Klastrup (Born 1970), Danish digital and social media scholar
  • Alison Knowles (born 1933), American installation artist using visual, aural and tactile elements
  • Alinta Krauth

L

  • Tina La Porta (born 1967), American digital artist and writer
  • Deena Larsen (born 1964), American new media and hypertext author
  • Brenda Laurel (born 1950), Video game developer
  • Olia Lialina (born 1971), Russian internet artist and experimental film critic
  • Christine Love (born 1989), Canadian novelist, interactive fiction writer and video game developer
  • Marjorie Luesebrink (1943–2023), pen name M.D. Coverley, American author of hypertext fiction

M

N

O

P

  • Allison Parrish (fl 2000s), American poet, games designer and creator of poetry bots
  • Celia Pearce (born 1961), American game designer
  • Judith Pintar (fl 1980s), sociologist, harp player and author of interactive fiction
  • Jessica Pressman (fl 2010), American academic and author involved in electronic literature, digital poetry and media
  • Kate Pullinger (born 1961), Canadian novelist and academic, author of digital fiction

Q

  • Alissa Quart (born 1972), American writer, poet and multimedia author
  • Zoë Quinn (born 1987), American video game developer, interactive fiction writer

R

S

T

U

W

Y

Z

  • Jody Zellen (born 1961), American digital artist and art critic
  • Marina Zurkow (born 1962), American visual and electronic artist

See also

References

  1. "Electronic Literature Organization". ELO. 2008. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
  2. "Welcome to The NEXT". The Next. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
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