In Born, Multimedia, and the Avante-Garde, the author
discusses new media by means of interpreting literary works, and about
nonverbal media as a literary form. The author discusses how published works
were crafted in print and then interpreted into multimedia. In thinking about
the magazine Born and how it is a new work of composing, people tend to find a
tension between old and new technologies, and “that such uses of technology
suggests an anxiety that poetry is insufficient in itself”. The theory
discusses the composing and cross-pollinating between media and how it affects
the way that readers view the content. At Texas State University, there are
weekly book and poetry readings that students and faculty members are
encouraged to attend. On April 17th,
author Jorie Graham read some of her poetry aloud to attendees. It made me
think about how the event would have been different if she had used technology
to share her poems with the audience instead of just reading them. It would
have been interesting to see people’s faces if there had been an interactive
online version of her poetry that she could’ve showed. A multimodal
presentation of poetry would add a new dimension to Graham’s poetry because writing
cannot truly capture sound, yet multimedia can actually capture the spoken word
within its text. The authors of Born magazine discuss how there is controversy
when people take literature and add technology to it. I believe it is
controversial because it is so different from what people have known for so
many years. The tension that occurs when you “cross pollinate” technology with
literature is interesting to study, and I wonder how members of the Texas State
community would view the multimodality.
-Hailey
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