Divergent Streams
In this chapter Rettberg discusses forms of E-lit that build on the genres discussed earlier in the book and take them in different ways. I found this chapter very interesting, mostly because I enjoyed reading about how the genres we have discussed are currently being shaped into different things. I found the concept of expanded cinema very intriguing, as it shows some potential ways E-lit could grow, I think the reason I found this so interesting is because the aspect of E-lit I like the most is how quickly changing and varied it is. That made it very fun to read about some ways E-lit could evolve further in the future.
I found text rain to be very cool and I wish I was able to view it in person. I went to a museum one time that had a very similar instillation to text rain except instead of interacting with text the viewer was interacting with butterflies. I think text makes a lot more sense to have the viewer interact with, since reading is already interactive in a way. Taking the sort of passive interaction of reading and turning it into a more active form of interaction is such an interesting idea. I wish the page linked in the syllabus had the poem on it since I am very curious about what it is. I also wonder how long it is and how difficult it would be to actually read the whole thing while it is falling around you.
Good question, I'm not sure you can read the whole thing in installation form. Maybe? I thought it was on Utterback's site, but could only find this video of a reading by the author (it starts at 2 minutes): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BiT4D1diJps
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