LOTR & Polymorphism

In a video interview on GameSpot (posted 14/11/05), a developer of The Lord of the Rings, The Battle for Middle-earth II PC game said that “the first Lord of the Rings PC game to incorporate the book rights from Tolkien Enterprises as well as the NewLine cinema rights that EA has traditionally held.” The single-player campaign centers on the War of the North, which was not explored in the films. The developer says the wars were much larger and heavily invovled the elves and dwarfs. The events take place concurrently with the events in the films. Now, this is another wonderful example of how a storyworld is distributed over the media channels, over arts types and is not just an adaptation. Now, it is a kind of adaptation of the scenes in the book. It is not a faithful adaptation to try and redeliver Tolkien’s content. It is a use of the storyworld, events and characters to extend the ways in which audiences can experience Tolkien’s world and Peter Jackson’s rendition in the films. Although the events are covered in the books (though not all, it is a game and so the player will be creating events within the storyworld) they are not in the films. This means, for the un-book-initiated, it is a new part of the LOTR world. I also like that the events run concurrently to the events in the film. So, the parallel plots running in the book are now spread across mediums and arts types, not just abstractly in the reader’s mind. There is now a discourse (how the story is told) and device (how the story is experienced) difference. This is the polymorphic narrative paradigm. I cannot wait to get all these works into a visualisation software to show how the narrative universe works over the media channels, over time, across authors, etc.

Networked Narrative Creator & Researcher

Dave Miller emailed me late last year and I only just followed up by checking out his blog and thesis. He has created and researched networked narratives. You can find out about his works at his blog, where you can also get a copy of his Masters: ‘When the Network Becomes An Author: A Critical Analysis of Today’s Interactive Narratives on the Internet”. The following is an overview of his Masters.

Dave begins by outlining how he began with the area of networked narratives. He describes his work: The Chinese Cocklepickers. This work is a kind of manual “search fiction” and “search art“. Dave conducted searches on subjects in his story and then cut and paste the resulting text and images into the work. The webpages are collages to “connect the work with the outside world…to make them appear more ‘live’.” Dave notes that there can be surprising juxtapositions that “subvert” the “original story’s intentions”. This juxtaposition of contrary text and image works very well with networked and simulated networked pieces and interactive comics.

Here is the thesis intro:

This is a critical analysis of interactive stories being told across networks. My particular interest is in networked stories told in collaboration by many authors, even stories where the network itself is an author, and in stories that play with fact and fiction. This research will inform my practical work, to extend my experiments into new forms of interactive online stories.

I like the key areas he is looking at:
* networked stories;
* collaborative writing/”collective authorship”/emergent narrative/…;
* computer-generated content;
* fact & fiction.

Dave explores these topes through some of the greatest hits of new media arts: Stuart Moulthrop’s ‘Victory Garden’; Michael Joyce’s ‘Afternoon‘, Tim Wright and R. Bevan’s ‘Online Caroline‘; Joseph Weizenbaum’s ‘Eliza‘; Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy IF (1984 version); Rob Wittig’s ‘The Fall of the Site of Marsha’; Scott McCloud’s 5-Card Nancy; Andy Deck’s ‘Panel Junction’ and Oldton by Tim Wright. Oldton is a story that is visually delivered through playing cards. When the card is turned over you get a part of the story of the fictional town and real memories of Tim and invited contributors. This work reminded me of Mind Candy’s ARG Perplex City and the use of cards with puzzles that gives the player further information about a fictional town. But what is interesting about Oldton is the collaborative aspect and how people can input content. Oldton is manual in that items submitted are not immediately added to the system. Tim needs to input the content. The input is in the form of stories and pictures. Andy Deck’s Panel Junction allows for alot more modes of input: “via digital cameras, colour laser printers, scanners, mail, voice over IP (Skype), file uploading, and email”.

Dave also refers to Jim Andrews’ “dbcinema” as being in similiar territory. Indeed, all “database narrative” excursions relate in this generated-content paradigm, regardless of the networked and single-author or collaborative specifics. There is also Lev Manovich’s “database narrative” and his “soft cinema project” as well as Marsha Kinder’s “database narrative” and her Labyrinth Project (and upcoming book called The Discreet Charms of Database Narrative); and Ross Gibson‘s database narrative too — which I think has some nice correlations with The Chinese Cocklepickers story as they both deal with real incidents and content.

To describe the phenomenon of stories that are networked and generated, Dave utilises Jill Walker’s theory of “distributed narratives” and her helpful observation that we can narrative distributed according to time, space and authorship factors. Dave then goes on to discuss more networked projects, such as Mongrel’s NetMonster (which looks like another great “search fiction”). The process of NetMonster, labelled as “generative social software” by Mongrel, is described as follows:

(1) The user enters a series of key phrases to search for, eg “Bush, Blair, Warâ€?
(2) NetMonster searches for images related to those terms and places the text around the images- this is a Google search
(3) NetMonster arranges the found images according to algorithms, and adds the date the URL was found to the image.
(4) NetMonster then searches for information around the found images (contextual search) and assembles this into the image. It takes 12 hours to render each image.

Dave also refers to Kate Armstrong and David Tippet’s Grafik Dynamo!, where images are loaded realtime from blogs and news sources. The complaints about this random inserting of content reminds me of my response to Simon Norton’s Testimony: A Story Machine. Dave also refers to Lewis LaCook’s ‘Black Holes’. Lewis describes this work — which creates poems from images, text and sounds from web searches — a “generative networked literary object”. Dave also refers to the use of Google poems in Rob Wittig’s fictional blog: Robwit.net. Lastly, he refers to Johnathan J. Harris’ ’10 by 10′. This project is described on the website as follows:

Every hour, 10×10 scans the RSS feeds of several leading international news sources, and performs an elaborate process of weighted linguistic analysis on the text contained in their top news stories. After this process, conclusions are automatically drawn about the hour’s most important words. The top 100 words are chosen, along with 100 corresponding images, culled from the source news stories. At the end of each day, month, and year, 10×10 looks back through its archives to conclude the top 100 words for the given time period. In this way, a constantly evolving record of our world is formed, based on prominent world events, without any human input.

Corrugation Street is Dave’s final work as part of his Masters. It is “a less conservative soap – exaggerated, quite surreal, working class life gone mad. A spoof on existing soaps, particularly Coronation Street (UK TV soap)” (50). Dave describes the 3 levels of collaboration as follows:

1. The user:
• Author, suggests search topics and subjects, which decide the content of the networked collage
• Sub-editor: changes the layout and appearance of the networked collage
• Researcher – adds news feeds.

2. The Generator script:
• Sub-editor: changes the layout and appearance of the networked collage
• Author: from scene 2 onwards it searches for words within the RSS and performs it’s own images searches based on those words. Then it repeats this process for each scene. In this way the generator script grabs progressively more authorship involvement than the user, as the story progresses.

3. Myself
• The main author. Providing not only the main story as a series of scenes, but a framework for all future stories to fit into (the soap opera) (page 52)

Future iterations, Dave anticipates, will have “to invite people to add their own stories/ episodes, and take the soap in directions they wish. Users can add true stories, or stories related to what’s happening in the news. Contributions can be in different forms: short stories, jokes, and poems.” Ultimately, the his “vision for Corrugation Street is for it to grow into an online soap opera that is owned and shaped by both the community and by the Internet itself.”

Dave ended the thesis discussing the lack of use of the networked abilities of the Internet (beyond publication) by creatives. He cites the recent survey by trAce, which “showed that only 7% of writers had used the Internet in a creative way.”.

So, what does this have to do with cross-media entertainment? Well, in looking at the cross-media paradigm I look at ALL forms of entertainment or art or literature (choose your term). I look at new media arts, old media arts, non-text media, generated media, spoken stories, games and performance. The field of interactive narratives is ripe with ideas for how one can tell stories effectively int he cross-media paradigm. Networked narratives, or generated narratives, or collaborative narratives are an aspect of my own research in that I’m looking at what I term polymorphic works. This is the PhD side of my research (I do research just for my work in industry as well — well frankly, they both pat each others’ backs). My PhD research looks at entertainment from the point of view of storyworlds that have multiple manifestations in many texts, by many authors, over many channels, in many modes, over time, in many arts types and so on. So, the systems and ideas that people, like Dave, come up with to understand and plot the path of the entertainment experience when multiple texts are involved is important.

So, Dave, I look forward to following your work and reading more about your discoveries. Check out too, Andrea Zapp’s book on ‘Networked Narrative Environments’ and the whole area of Telematic Arts and so on. I think the most valuable parts of Dave’s thesis is the writing-up of the creative and theoretical development of his creative project ‘Corrugation Street’ and the interviews with Tim Wright about Online Caroline and Oldton. The former, the writing-up of the creative work versions is helpful because it shows the decision-making process a creator of an interactive-work deals with. Indeed, the stages of evolution of an interactive creative work over time and the stages of acceptance of interactivity by an audience. Daves journey is akin to the development of interactive works and provides, therefore, a valuable insight into how people learn and acclimitise to interactive entertainment and associated theories.

[Reblogged at WriterResponseTheory.org]

URL being held ransom

I have had the unluckiest thing happen. My www.crossmediastorytelling.com domain expired without me being notified. It was subsequently taken by a company who now want at least $200USD for it. I cannot believe this has happened, especially with Max’s book just out and my domain name for CMS all through it! I only just changed to cross-mediaentertainment a month or so ago and just redirected all the CMS traffic to here. Not everyone knows, yet, that I’ve changed domain names, and some people won’t until they enter CMS. I had always intended to keep both running anyway (two points-of-entry). And now they never will know. I am furious and frustrated. The company who manages my domain name, registerfly, hasn’t got back to me (I received email notifications everyone of my domain name except this time). I will always autorenew now.

I feel so sad. I’ve lost a digital child. 🙁

All is good! They’ve given my URL back! Yay! 🙂