This assignment will ask you to write an 6-to-8 page analytical essay and to create a slide-show video with sound which serves as a preview or promo of that essay.
The Essay
First, in an essay of six-to-eight pages, compare old-media and new-media versions of the same work: a movie that's been turned into a video game (or visa versa), a televisioin show that's been released as a DVD, a book that's been translated to an iPad app.
The purpose is to use this specific comparison to illustrate and discuss some characteristic(s) of New Media as they have been analyzed by the critical sources we've read this semester.
A Problematic Element
Focus on one particular element that appears in both versions: a character, place, scene, relationship, theme, or other specific component.
How does this element (character, place, scene...) change between the old- to new-media versions? How does this change represent the designer's or writer's response to a problem or challenge caused by differences in new vs. old media as vehicles?
For example, the character of girl-sleuth Nancy Drew has been translated from a popular adventure-novel series (first published in 1930) into a video game. How does Nancy change as a character from book to game? How do these differences indicate challenges for the video-game designers?
Comparing a similar plot situation in both old- and new-media versions, we see that book-Nancy is a unfailingly ethical, clever, resourceful, and ultimatey right. On the other hand, game-Nancy is only as smart and admirable as the player makes her. The player controls Nancy--is Nancy--and therefore game-Nancy is fallible. While readers vicariously enjoy and identify with book-Nancy's intelligence and grace under pressure, players in control of game-Nancy find in her a mirror image of themselves.
How do ideas and examples from Lev Manovich and Tom Bissell explain the differences between the old- and new-media Nancy Drews? What key terms and ideas from these writers put these differences in critical context and help you understand the challenges designers faced in translating Nancy Drew to New Media? Does your analysis of Nancy Drew contradict what either critic has to say
A variation on this approach would be to analyze one element of a video game that's been made into a movie:
examples of video game/movie crossovers include Street Fighter, Mortal Kombat, BloodRayne, Doom, House of the Dead, Alone in the Dark, Resident Evil, Silent Hill, Tomb Raider.
Textual Guidelines
Use at least five quotations from Manovich or Bissell to sustain and enrich your argument. Employ MLA parenthetical citation an documentation format to cite each reference in your text and to document them in a "Works Cited" section at the end of your essay.
Slideshow
Imagine that you are producing a New Media preview or promo for your essay, which would appear on your personal web site, Facebook page, Twitter feed, or elsewhere to entice visitors to click a link and read your essay.
We will learn to use iPhoto to create a timed slideshow, with camera-work effects like panning and zoom and a sound track. The soundtrack can be mixed and edited in Audacity. From iPhoto, you will export the slideshow as a .mov video file suitable for delivery via the web.
The slides of the slideshow should combine images and words. The soundtrack can feature music, voice, or sound or any combination of these that is appropriate for your purposes.
See some examples of previews promoting documentary and non-fiction works:
- Dracula for the iPad
- Dracula Developer Diary 2
- Nancy Drew TV Show: Secret of the Whispering Walls (Part 2)
- Nancy Drew Game: Ransom of the Seven Ships
- sample project from a Visual Rhetoric class: promot for an essay on Dorothea Lange's "Migrant Mother" photograph.The Fog of War
- Helvetica (and the non-verbal alternative version)
- The Corporation