%0 Journal Article %T Connect and immerse: a poetry of codes and signals %A Jesper Olsson %J Journal of Aesthetics & Culture %D 2012 %I Co-Action Publishing %R 10.3402/jac.v4i0.18614 %X This article investigates how codes and signals were employed in avant-garde poetry and art in the 1960s, and how such attempts were performed in the wake of cybernetics and (partly) through the use of new media technologies, such as the tape recorder and the computer. This poetry¡ªas exemplified here by works by ke Hodell, Peter Weibel, and Henri Chopin¡ªnot only employed new materials, media, and methods for the production of poems; it also transformed the interface of literature and the act of reading through immersion in sound, through the activation of different cognitive modes, and through an intersensorial address. On the one hand, this literary and artistic output can be seen as a response to the increasing intermedation (in Katherine Hayles's sense) in culture and society during the last century. On the other hand, we might, as contemporary readers, return to these poetic works in order to use them as media archaeological tools that might shed light on the aesthetic transformations taking place within new media today. %K poetry %K code %K signal %K intermediation %K sound %K embodiment %U http://www.aestheticsandculture.net/index.php/jac/article/view/18614/22815