Deena Larsen


Deena Larsen is a new media, hypertext author. She is best known for creating structural patterns in hypermedia literature. Larsen has been working with electronic literature since the 1980s and is considered one of the pioneer artists in the field. Her work has been published in online journals such as the Iowa Review Web, Cauldron and Net, frAme, inFLECT, and Blue Moon Review. Since May 2007, the Deena Larsen Collection of early electronic literature has been housed at the Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities.

Biography

Deena Larsen received her BA in English/Philosophy from the University of Northern Colorado in 1986. Her undergraduate thesis, "Nansense Ya Snorsted: A logical look at nonsense" received the university's 1986 Best Thesis Award. After spending time in San Francisco and Japan, she returned to Colorado and earned her MA in English from the University of Colorado at Boulder in 1991. She currently works at the Bureau of Reclamation, where she developed and wrote the Decision Process Guidebook: How to Succeed in Government.
She has led many writers workshops to encourage exploration into the possibilities of hypertext. She also hosted the Electronic Literature Organization chats from 2000-2005 and taught at Red Rocks Community College, Lakewood, Colorado.
Deena Larsen has MHE, and tells her story. See .

Works

Deena Larsen's first work, Marble Springs, Eastgate Systems, 1993 was one of the first interactive hypertext poetry collections. The work explored the lives of women in a Colorado mountain town between 1853 and 1935 in the tradition of The Spoon River Anthology and Winesburg Ohio. Written in Hypercard, Marble Springs presaged web navigational structures and icons. It provides margins for notes, biographical notations, and blank "pages" for readers to add their own characters into the town.
Her second work, Samplers, Eastgate Systems, 1997, is a series of short stories done in Storyspace, and showcased the unique capabilities of Storyspace. For example, Storyspace allows links to have names, and Larsen used this capability to comment on, and undercut, the story.
Her many subsequent works focus on and exemplify different aspects of potential narrative and navigational structures in hypermedia. Regarding Larsen's work, scholar Jessica Laccetti observed that, "In Larsen’s case, as in Fisher’s , a default path is built into the narrative, suggesting both chronological sequence and plot development. While 'scholars and analysts' can travel more flexible paths through the stories, first time readers are advised to follow thematic or character links."
A list of her works includes:
Her textbook, Fundamentals, details the basic rhetorical moves possible in Hypermedia.