Danger: ignoring details can harm your mind!
at Saturday, January 29, 20118 comments Labels: abuse, creative writing, details, ekphrastic poetry, gay, let go, mind, suicide
Hypertext: Make up your own story while you read
at Sunday, January 23, 20111 comments Labels: creative writing, ebooks, french new wave, google.sites, hyperlink, hypertext, iphone, reading, short story
New Media has become our present and I‘m certain it will be essential in our future. That's why I wrote my own hypertext story.
Last year my course fascinated me with a way of writing called "Hypertext". I wasn't aware that I already knew this to some extent - and you do, too. Children's books sometimes use hypertext to make the stories more active for the reader.
So, let me explain how hypertext works: similar to hyperlinks, where a word or word-group leads to a different webpage or subpage, hypertext uses "links" to switch to another part of the story. "Why?", you might ask now. Because it adds interactivity to the reading process.
Actually, there are many possibilities in utilizing hypertext. Some use it, to confuse the reader to extract him from his usual reading habits. Others try to tell stories on the basis of parallel layers that the reader can randomly explore. After all, they always involve the reader experimenting and going on a quest inside of the story.
Iphones already enable users to read ebooks on a phone. Most hypertext still exists online, which makes it somewhat inaccessible for the general public, because they don't want to sit at the computer. What, if ebooks would make use of hypertexts in a way that would especially attract iphone (and alike) users. This way, while you are waiting at the train station, you could not just read a good story, but you could also construct the way you read it yourself.
In my own hypertext story, I tried to give the reader three pathways that are randomly interlinked throughout the progression. By using different colours, the reader can decide between the main branches of the story. In order to get the whole picture of the characters, though, the reader will have to revisit the scenes and explore different pathways. This will in a way bring more knowledge to the reader, but also provide him with various different outcomes. It really is up to you.
If you're curious now, visit this free Google Site and read my story.
It is called Joe on a New Wave. You access the story by clicking on the last sentence. Be aware, there are no obvious links, as it is supposed to be a close-to-real reading experience. Thinking about the links will help to define the story's output.
Other examples of hypertext:
http://deenalarsen.net/rain/
http://www.ryman-novel.com/
http://www.yorku.ca/caitlin/waves/
Essay: How Bonny and Clyde changed the World
at Sunday, January 16, 20113 comments Labels: 1967, bonnie, clyde, crime, film studies, hollywood, neo classical, new hollywood
US NASA published my poem
at Saturday, January 08, 20110 comments Labels: chandra, competition, gas, harvard, nasa, poem, stars, universe, win, world war 2, xray