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Assignment 2:
New Media Writing: Personal History / Public Experience
- Assigned: Tuesday, September 17
- Essay due: Thursday, October 8
- Site Posted to the Web: Sunday, October 20
- Print outs and commentaries due: Tuesday, October 22
The Essay:
Write a three-to-five page essay or account that describes your individual
history with a public experience. A "public experience" is something
that a public experienced and remembers together: a television series,
a local event, the career of a musical group, a forest fire, a news event,
etc. The "public" may be a local (a town or region), national
or global.
The purpose of the essay is to place the public experience in the context
of your personal history--to "situate" that experience--in a
way that makes the reader see the public experience differently from how
it appears in purely in public terms.
Examples
Movies make this personal/public move all the time:
- think about how movie Titanic
attached new meaning to the famous, public disaster by placing it in
the context of a personal story.
- Almost Famous--one
kid's experience of 1973 rock-music culture.
- The Perfect Storm--a
meteorological event meets a group of fishermen
- Muriel's Wedding--From
Porpoise Spit, Australia, Muriel finds herself with the help of the
music of Abba.
Then, the Web Site:
After you've written, turned in, and received feedback on the essay,
create a Web site about the same "public experience" using information
and materials from your essay. What content can you repurpose, what must
you lose, and what additional material must go out and find? Experiment
with maintaining the personal perspective and tone--to distinguish your
site from large, corporate-style sites on the topic already out there
on the Web--while still creating a publicly useful site. Look for organizing
principles other than straight-line narrative, which works best in print,
not hypertext.
In creating the Web site, try to realize the following goals:
- iconology: In moving from print to digital form, you'll want
to "visualize" your subject with pictures, maps, diagrams.
You'll also want to unify all the pages by repeating certain visual
elements (a banner, for instance) that create a consistent sense of
place or "brand."
- texture: In words and images, you want to create a sense of
voice, of immediacy, or of experience (rather than just giving a lot
of information). Try to bring from your essay the interest and energy
of your own voice and perspective. While a Web site is perhaps not as
easy to make personal as a personal essay, it does not have to be impersonal
and dull.
- hypertext: When you wrote your essay, you could expect a reader
to read from the first word to the last, sequentially and completely.
Not all readers will live up to that expectation, but that's their fault!
When you make a Web site, however, you can't expect the same thing of
"users." You need to reorganize the presentation your subject
matter into non-sequential "chunks" (pages) that you'll make
available through a menu of links. These links will be expressed as
a set of verbal labels that should be meaningful to the audience, and
give the audience a kind of map of your subject matter.
Commentary and Print out
You will write, print and hand in a 2-3 page (double-spaced) self-commentary.
Please see the complete Self Commentary Guidelines
before writing it.
Also, print out a copy of the Web page and hand it in by the due date
specified above.
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