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Narrative As Virtual Reality

39.60

Taal

Engels

Bindwijze

Paperback

Oorspronkelijke releasedatum

15 oktober 2003

Aantal paginas

420

Illustraties

Met illustraties

Hoofdauteur

Marie-Laure Ryan

Hoofdredacteur

Stephen G. Nichols

Tweede Redacteur

Gerald Prince

Hoofduitgeverij

Johns Hopkins University Press

Editie

New edition

Extra groot lettertype

Nee

Gewicht

614 g

Studieboek

Nee

Verpakking breedte

152 mm

Verpakking hoogte

23 mm

Verpakking lengte

229 mm

EAN

9780801877537

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Is there a significant difference in attitude between immersion in a game and immersion in a movie or novel? What are the new possibilities for representation offered by the emerging technology of virtual reality? As Marie-Laure Ryan demonstrates in
Narrative as Virtual Reality,
the questions raised by new, interactive technologies have their precursors and echoes in pre-electronic literary and artistic traditions. Formerly a culture of immersive ideals—getting lost in a good book, for example—we are becoming, Ryan claims, a culture more concerned with interactivity. Approaching the idea of virtual reality as a metaphor for total art,
Narrative as Virtual Reality
applies the concepts of immersion and interactivity to develop a phenomenology of reading.

Ryan’s analysis encompasses both traditional literary narratives and the new textual genres made possible by the electronic revolution of the past few years, such as hypertext, interactive movies and drama, digital installation art, and computer role-playing games. Interspersed among the book’s chapters are several “interludes” that focus exclusively on either key literary texts that foreshadow what we now call “virtual reality,” including those of Baudelaire, Huysmans, Ignatius de Loyola, Calvino, and science-fiction author Neal Stephenson, or recent efforts to produce interactive art forms, like the hypertext “novel”
Twelve Blue,
by Michael Joyce, and
I’m Your Man,
an interactive movie. As Ryan considers the fate of traditional narrative patterns in digital culture, she revisits one of the central issues in modern literary theory—the opposition between a presumably passive reading that is taken over by the world a text represents and an active, deconstructive reading that imaginatively participates in the text’s creation.

Narrative As Virtual Reality
Narrative As Virtual Reality
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