From the category archives:

Digital Storytelling

CC-BY Flickr/jblyberg Dear Authors, Your Next Book Should be an App, Not an iBook is a great call to action from writer and media entrepreneur Cody Brown, who reflects on the way writers can and should adapt their creative practice to new platforms (because audiences sure as heck will)

If you, as an author, see the iPad as a place to ‘publish’ your next book, you are completely missing the point. What do you think would have happened if George Orwell had the iPad? Do you think he would have written for print then copy and pasted his story into the iBookstore? If this didn’t work out well, do you think he would have complained that there aren’t any serious-readers anymore? No. He would have looked at the medium, then blown our minds.

Read the whole piece at TechCrunch.

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The case for alternate reality games

July 8, 2009

First Monday has published a fantastic paper investigating the evolution and storytelling opportunities of alternate reality games (ARGs), Storytelling in new media: The case of alternate reality games, 2001-2009: ARGs encourage players to participate in an emerging collective story to motivate particular types of behavior and encourage the formation of social groups. Players participate because [...]

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Amanda is coming…

July 8, 2009

A while back I posted about The Amanda Project from Fourth Story Media, a cross-platform digital storytelling project aimed at teenage girls. It looks like they’re gearing up to launch it soon and there’s a slick teaser on the official site to get you excited. Highly anticipating this one…   Here’s a question: If I [...]

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Dr Roundbottom, I presume?

October 14, 2008

BoingBoing has alerted us to a marvellous multi-channel fiction and photography project called Dr. Julius T Roundbottom. The puppetmaster of this fascinating world is Jeremiah Tolbert, who says of the project: “It’s a little fantasy, a little steampunk, a little clockpunk, and I hope a hell of a lot of fun. The comment community that [...]

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Storytelling 2.0

August 29, 2008

…and with that neat turn of phrase, Brian Tart, publisher of Dutton of Penguin Group USA, has expressed why subsidiary media rights are no longer subsidiary. They are the whole box and dice. From Rachel Deahl @ Publishers Weekly: Dutton has laid out big money for what it’s dubbing a ”digi-novel” by the creator of the [...]

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