I was pretty fascinated by the discussion of video games in these articles. I've never been super into gaming but have had my share of obsessions (Legend of Zelda) and I understand why the literary credibility of the genre is debatable. Some games definitely take the player on a journey where problem-solving skills progress him or her along a storyline, but others are just meaningless battle or racing games. While I'm sure they're all fun in their own right, I really feel like games that involve the player in acting out a part in a story are truly the most engaging. Will Wright agrees with this in his article "Dream Machines", asserting that video games stimulate a child (or adult's) imagination in the same manner as literature. But the thing about video games is that they really allow for so much more imaginative freedom than normal literary narratives. For example, when was the last time you saw someone make a rap based on a work of literature? I found this compilation of Zelda rap remixes and it totally rules. The world of video gaming is vast with possibilities!
Monday, March 23, 2009
Video Games as Literature
I was pretty fascinated by the discussion of video games in these articles. I've never been super into gaming but have had my share of obsessions (Legend of Zelda) and I understand why the literary credibility of the genre is debatable. Some games definitely take the player on a journey where problem-solving skills progress him or her along a storyline, but others are just meaningless battle or racing games. While I'm sure they're all fun in their own right, I really feel like games that involve the player in acting out a part in a story are truly the most engaging. Will Wright agrees with this in his article "Dream Machines", asserting that video games stimulate a child (or adult's) imagination in the same manner as literature. But the thing about video games is that they really allow for so much more imaginative freedom than normal literary narratives. For example, when was the last time you saw someone make a rap based on a work of literature? I found this compilation of Zelda rap remixes and it totally rules. The world of video gaming is vast with possibilities!
Sunday, March 22, 2009
John Cayley
John Cayley's literal art is completely captivating. He makes poetry both a visual experience and a sort of game, where the reader is responsible for discovering the code behind his seemingly arbitrary arrangement of letters. Language is completely reinterpreted in these works; writing becomes more the nature of language than a form of speech. The poem in the images above, "River Island", was my favorite of his works. The reader can control the organization of letters in order to make simple poems, as well as manipulate the images to produce sound. It is a true sensory experience playing with these poems, and redefines the art of literature. The reader must think not only about the words in front of him, but the reason why they they appear in the order, arrangement, and aesthetic appearance that they do.
This reminds me of a website I've been following for about a year called QuickMuse. The site invites renowned poets to write a poem on the spot, then plays the process in real time for the reader. As the site producers put it,
"QuickMuse is a cutting contest, a linguistic jam session, a series of on-the-fly compositions in which some great poets riff away on a randomly picked subject. It's an experiment, QuickMuse, to see if first thoughts are indeed the best ones. We're not entirely sure about this, but we suspect QuickMuse will bring readers closer to the moment of composition than they have ever been before. Best part: our "playback" feature lets you watch the poems unfold, second by second. Or as Thlyias Moss says, it's "the chance for a poem to find its/audience fast," in which words don't "have as much/time to stale, pale/lose the relevance of the moment" to which they belong."
The process is fascinating, because you're able to see authors add, delete, and move around phrases as they think of them. It's a great inspiration for aspiring poets as well as a marvel of recording technology.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
