Home » Posts tagged "social media" (Page 5)

School’s In Session!

Feeling bored? Need to stretch your brain, but not up to paying to take a full-fledged college class? Here is your chance to look at AMC’s The Walking Dead in a totally new way. The University of California at Irvine is offering a MOOC (that’s a massive open online course) titled “Society, Science, Survival: Lessons from AMC’s The Walking Dead that takes an interdisciplinary look at the show, using concepts from math, public health, and science. These can be intimidating topics but boy, the class sounds fun. If you’d like to learn more about the class, or enroll (it’s free), here’s a link to the webpage for the class, which starts October 14. The new season for the show is October 13, so the timing is perfect for watchers of the show! If you decide to take it, I’d love to hear about the experience, and the resources you end up using!

Why Libraries Will Never Die

There’s a guy named Marc Bodnick, who apparently participates in some kind of social media experiment at Forbes magazine called Quora, where the contributors ask questions of each other and then they all try to answer the question as completely as possible and organize the information effectively, such as “What is a Realistic Trade The Lakers Can Get to Get Dwight Howard”? Kinda sounds like they’re trying to invent Wikipedia, with fewer contributors, but experiment is the way we learn.

Marc decided to address a different question, and the question he decided to answer is: “Will Public Libraries Go Exctinct”? His answer, although he elaborated it in much more detail here, was “basically, yes”, That’s based on his assumption that the most important service libraries have is lending books, and that people don’t borrow books anymore because they all have ereaders, which are more convenient. And also, that most “power readers” will love reading on their Kindles instead of holding a book in their hands. (News flash, Marc, I’m one of those power readers (aka insane bibliomaniacs) and I know many others who read not just one kind of book, but BOTH). My dad agrees with Marc,  by the way… thanks for the support, Dad.

The response to Marc’s theory from librarian Erica Freedman, which appeared just below his response, was this:

 

Most libraries now lend e-books, music, and magic.

Wow. That’s something I never thought I’d see in Forbes. Or in any response by any librarian to this particular argument. But I like it. And I think it’s true.

Wait. That can’t be right. Maybe I need to finish my coffee?

 

Okay, done now. Let me see that again.

 

Most libraries now lend e-books, music, and other media as well. But the real reason libraries will disappear is that people “perceive” them as only lending books”.

 

Well, that’s more what I expected, especially in a response that appears in Forbes. But I liked the first one better, Erica. Optimism and magic are both pluses in the library world. Can I change it back? I think I will, if it’s okay with you.

 

…Libraries lend e-books, music, and magic.

 

 

Marc, imagine what else they might share with this world. Or others. A Kindle book won’t protect you, once you start moving through the story of Stephen King’s Ur. You might WANT to give that back to the library.

I don’t think anyone wants the magic to die. And, since libraries aren’t businesses, and the world needs them for much more than ebooks, these places of knowledge, growth, and inspiration, the heartblood of their communities, will continue on. And the magic will, too.

And that is why libraries will never die.

Immersive Storytelling: Coming Soon To A Fictional World Near You

I just finished a great book called The Art of Immersion, by Frank Rose, about how storytelling is changing. It’s both exciting and a little discombobulating, at least for a digital immigrant like me. Rose isn’t writing about changing format, exactly, although there is certainly both excitement and discomfort in the world of readers, authors, and publishers about the general shift from paper books to ebooks. What he’s talking about is more like a shift in the way we experience the world. Stories are essential to that.

In today’s world of overwhelming media exposure and social media tools, many people want multiple, connected, participatory approaches to fictional worlds. One of Rose’s examples was the Star Wars universe. Movies, toys, books, comics, games, and much more originate from George Lucas’ empire, but he’s given Star Wars fans license, within limits, to produce their own content as well. There are endless discussions and forums online, websites dedicated to Star Wars, YouTube videos inspired by the movies: there’s even a wiki called Wookiepedia. George Lucas created a world that felt real, in every detail, but the fans have taken it deeper, farther, and wider than he could ever have expected. Using every connection and media tool at their disposal, fans have made Star Wars into far more than a movie (or even six movies). It comes at you from every angle. It’s what Rose calls an “immersive experience”.

An immersive experience doesn’t have to be that large or complex- I was recently pointed towards a review of a theater production inspired by Macbeth called Sleep No More. It takes place on three floors, each with many rooms. The audience members are masked and have the opportunity to wander randomly through the the production, following a character, seeking out hidden places, touching things, almost a participant in the action- immersed in the experience. Macbeth, of course, has been interpreted in many ways, and in other media- maybe a love of the play attracted some audience members, and maybe a show like this one could inspire someone in the audience to check out other interpretations. Or maybe someone who liked the idea of participating in such a creepy experience will try out another live theater performance. It’s all good.

So, immersive experiences don’t HAVE to directly involve digital technologies, advertising, movies, social media, or whatever. But they have to involve people and stories, and when you don’t have the ability to engage people one on one like Sleep No More can, those are ways to reach a lot of people quickly- and even to engage them in the story you’re creating on both an individual level (by empowering them to participate or express themselves in the ways they want to) but also on a collaborative level via technology tools and social media that gives them ownership, too, and it has the opportunity to take storytelling to a completely different place, involving outer experiences as well as (to quote a poem I love) the pictures that storm inside our head.