Overview
- Provides history of interactive narratives over almost 1000 years and focuses on collaboration as well as interactivity
- Shows historical trajectory of interactive narrative against which to consider today’s interactive narratives
- Provides images of interactive narratives from to Ars Magna to Califia to Inanimate Alice
- Offers an intimate view of how a small group of authors used social media and brought a canonical work into today’s mashup narrative world
- Introduces instructors to how their students can collaborate using social media to create a social media narrative
- Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
Part of the book series: International Series on Computer, Entertainment and Media Technology (ISCEMT)
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Table of contents (7 chapters)
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Interactive Narrative: Collaborative Culture
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Interactive Narrative: Collaborative Practice
Keywords
About this book
This book includes a short history of interactive narrative and an account of a small group collaboratively authored social media narrative: Romeo and Juliet on Facebook: After Love Comes Destruction.
At the forefront of narrative innovation are social media channels – speculative spaces for creating and experiencing stories that are interactive and collaborative. Media, however, is only the access point to the expressiveness of narrative content. Wikis, messaging, mash-ups, and social media (Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and others) are on a trajectory of participatory story creation that goes back many centuries. These forms offer authors ways to create narrative meaning that reflects our current media culture, as the harlequinade reflected the culture of the 18th century, and as the volvelle reflected that of the 13th century.
Interactivity, Collaboration, and Authoring in Social Media first prospects the last millennium for antecedents of today’s authoring practices. It does so with a view to considering how today’s digital manifestations are a continuation, perhaps a reiteration, perhaps a novel pioneering, of humans’ abiding interest in interactive narrative. The book then takes the reader inside the process of creating a collaborative, interactive narrative in today’s social media through an authoring experience undertaken by a group of graduate students. The engaging mix of blogs, emails, personal diaries
, and fabricated documents used to create the narrative demonstrates that a social media environment can facilitate a meaningful and productive collaborative authorial experience and result in an abundance of networked, personally expressive, and visually and textually referential content. The resulting narrative, After Love Comes Destruction, based in Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, shows how a generative narrative space evolved around the students’ use of social media in ways they had not previously considered both for authoring and for delivery of their final narrative artifact. ÂAuthors and Affiliations
About the author
Bibliographic Information
Book Title: Interactivity, Collaboration, and Authoring in Social Media
Authors: Krystina Madej
Series Title: International Series on Computer, Entertainment and Media Technology
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-25952-9
Publisher: Springer Cham
eBook Packages: Computer Science, Computer Science (R0)
Copyright Information: The Author(s) 2016
Hardcover ISBN: 978-3-319-25950-5Published: 29 January 2016
Softcover ISBN: 978-3-319-79862-2Published: 30 March 2018
eBook ISBN: 978-3-319-25952-9Published: 22 January 2016
Series ISSN: 2364-947X
Series E-ISSN: 2364-9488
Edition Number: 1
Number of Pages: XVII, 161
Number of Illustrations: 17 b/w illustrations, 67 illustrations in colour
Topics: User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction, Multimedia Information Systems