Honoring the Past and Creating the Future in Cyberspace: New Technologies and Cultural Specificity
Honoring the Past and Creating the Future in Cyberspace: New Technologies and Cultural Specificity
Date
2003
Authors
Kinder, Marsha
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University of Hawai'i Press
Center for Pacific Islands Studies
Center for Pacific Islands Studies
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Abstract
After tracing my academic journey from eighteenth-century English literary scholarship
to new media production, I interweave three discursive strands: descriptions
and demonstrations of several experimental interdisciplinary projects being
produced at the Labyrinth Project, a research initiative on interactive narrative
that I direct at the University of Southern California Annenberg Center for Communication;
five general principles learned while making these projects; and tentative
suggestions about how they might be applied to Pacific Island studies.
Despite the diversity of works presented (Mysteries and Desire: Searching the
Worlds of John Rechy, an interactive memoir about gay Chicano novelist John
Rechy; The Danube Exodus, a museum installation developed in collaboration
with Hungarian filmmaker Péter Forgács; The Dawn at My Back: a Memoir of
a Black Texas Upbringing, a dvd-rom based on an autobiography by African-
American photographer Carroll Parrott Blue; an e-learning course on Russian
Modernism with an online role-playing game at its center; a computer game for
teens called Runaways; and a website called Dreamwaves), all adhere to five
basic principles: honoring the past, emphasizing conceptualization over technical
mastery, taking a collaborative approach to interface design, searching for culturally
specific metaphors, and leveraging the transformative potential of database
narratives.
Description
Keywords
database narrative,
e-learning,
interactive narrative,
interactivity,
interface design,
Labyrinth Project,
narrative,
Oceania -- Periodicals.
Citation
Kinder, M. 2003. Honoring the Past and Creating the Future in Cyberspace: New Technologies and Cultural Specificity. Special issue, The Contemporary Pacific 15 (1): 93-115.
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