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Forty-Four Esolangs: The Art of Esoteric Code

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Forty-Four Esolangs: The Art of Esoteric Code

Contributors:

By (Author) Daniel Temkin
By (author) Allison Parrish

ISBN:

9780262553087

Publisher:

MIT Press Ltd

Imprint:

MIT Press

Publication Date:

23rd September 2025

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

176

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 229mm

Description

A riveting collection of one artist's many approaches to esolangs-esoteric programming languages-showcasing the form's limitless artistic potential. A riveting collection of one artist's many approaches to esolangs-esoteric programming languages-showcasing the form's limitless artistic potential. In Forty-Four Esolangs, Daniel Temkin challenges conventional definitions of language, code, and computer, showing the potential of esolangs-or esoteric progamming languages-as pure idea art. The languages in this volume ask programmers to write code in the form of prayer to the Greek gods, or as a pattern of empty folders, or to type code in tandem with another programmer, each with one hand on the keyboard, their rhythm and synchrony signifying computer action. Temkin includes languages written over the past fifteen years, along with some designed especially for this book. Other pieces are left as prompts for the reader to simply consider or perhaps to implement on their own. Esolangs are a collaborative form. Each language is a complete world of thought, where esoprogrammers build on the work of esolangers to make new discoveries. The language Velato, for instance, asks programmers to write music as code; while the language creates constraints for the programmer, each programmer brings their own coding and musical sensibility to the language. Other pieces are pure poetic suggestion in the legacy of Yoko Ono's event scores. These ask the programmer to, for example, follow the paths of the clouds over a single day and construct a language in response that uses those movements as code. Just as Ben Vautier claimed everything as art, this book blurs the lines between computation and everything else.

Author Bio

Daniel Temkin's writing on code art and esolangs has been published in Hyperallergic, Leonardo, and Outland among others, and his aesthetic theory of esolangs was published by Digital Humanities Quarterly. His blog esoteric.codes was the 2014 recipient of an ArtsWriters grant, developed in residence at the New Museum's NEW INC incubator, and exhibited at ZKM in 2018-19.

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