Flying People, Machines and Cities (Newsletter, May 2019)
I love it when I see traces of semiotic processes in all kinds of places, not only on my favourite one - the Web semiopshere. May was such a month. First, I found this: These are stairs at the national Palace of Culture with inspiring lines by the Bulgarian poet Valeri Petrov. The poem is called Flying People and
A Call to Intergalactic Adventure (Newsletter, April 2019)
We are powerful storytelling engines and our imagination and the number of semantic networks we can create is endless. And so are the opportunities to connect on the Web. Through writing. That was the main thread running through the activities of a seminar I organized this March in Bulgaria. It was called Web Scriptorium and my
Per aspera ad astra (Newsletter, March 2019)
This last month I found myself busy chasing "all things digital", and having forgotten that not all things are meant to be digital. Cyberspaces, as beautiful as their potential is, are only but a layer in a larger tapestry. A layer - rich, intriguing and increasingly machine-readable, a fragment (and a fractal) of our live's patchwork, yet not meant
Writing in the Age of Increasing Connectivity (Newsletter, August 2015)
Dear web weavers, Hello and thank you for letting me in your inbox, it's an honour and a thrill. I will be brief, as I only published two articles on teodorapetkova.com in February: Meaning, text, understanding and two pieces of jazz The Slow Web Concept Applied to Google Plus This month, hopefully, I will be having the wonderful semiotician Lucia Trezova