Print and Pixel article
I don't really understand the point of this article. I feel like the topic is similar with past articles we've had to read which relates to 'the future of publishing' or what the "future of publishing entails'.
This article also follows a similar format to those past articles we've had to read for class. What I mean by format is that is that some of the articles give an introducing to the value of books and reading, then somewhere in the middle, the articles refer to or giving a short history lesson of what publishing was like in the past, and then it summarizes or explains currently trending or available publishing methods Then the articles conclude with what publishing would be like in the future (which involves some sort of open ended statement, theory and what if's? situations).
Overall, my main immediate response was that this was dry read, and it felt somewhat similar in content to past articles I've had read in the past.
While reading this, I also felt bad for this author:
"More than a century earlier, in 1851, Herman Melville published Moby-Dick — which appears on the top-ten lists of Steven Holl and Tod Williams/Billie Tsien — to mixed reviews and weak sales. The poor reception devastated the 32-year-old author, and by the time he took a humdrum job as a customs inspector in New York City, a decade and a half later, his writing career was wrecked; when he died, in 1891, the New York Times obituary described him as "an absolutely forgotten man." Not until the Melville revival of the 1920s would the author's magnum opus be rediscovered. "
It is very unfortunate that his book was poorly received and ultimately ended his writing career. I felt bad for him. I've never actually finished reading Moby Dick myself, but I remember trying a long time ago and getting bored.
I also can't imagine "from news to periodicals to books" being a non profit enterprise in the future.
Tuesday, February 25, 2014
Tuesday, February 11, 2014
Post Artifact/
some article
This text is a great introduction to the next section of our course. Read it. It's also itself an instructive example of the post-artifactual publishing it argues for. In your response, discuss one or two features of the future book, according to Mod, which you find most intriguing or problematic.
I don't think I really understood what he wanted the future book to be like... I read it, but I didn't completely understand, maybe. A lot of his ideas went over my head. I mean he did mention this:
"Engagement with readers (the building of community and conversation) begins immediately in the pre-artifact system."
And this:
"The line between Publisher and Author is blurred."
And these two points just reminds me of Wikipedia, which is one example he mentioned earlier in the article. It also reminds me of one of those fiction writing games, where one person writes one line in a book, and the other writes another, and so on. Is this somewhat like the idea of what the author was saying? Like a digital version of this fiction writing game? I mean its an interesting idea, but I don't know about it.
Future of Food
Here is a link to the book I published yesterday! :D
The Demise and Birth of Food and Nutrition
http://www.lulu.com/shop/jennifer-zoleta/the-demise-and-the-birth-of-food-and-nutrition/paperback/product-21442766.html?showPreview=true
The Demise and Birth of Food and Nutrition
http://www.lulu.com/shop/jennifer-zoleta/the-demise-and-the-birth-of-food-and-nutrition/paperback/product-21442766.html?showPreview=true
Tuesday, February 4, 2014
Medium is the Message response
2.5 "The Medium is the Message", Marshall McLuhan
McLuhan writes
Just before an airplane breaks the sound barrier, sound waves become visible on the wings of the plane. The sudden visibility of sound just as it ends is an apt instance of the great pattern of being that reveals new and opposite forms just as the earlier forms reach their peak performance.
Think through this metaphor in relation to technologies of writing and publishing. In what sense might we say that the medium of print becomes visible just at the moment it is “superceded” by the internet?
That all depends... I mean, I don't know. I can't really think of a such an example since print still hasn't died as of yet. I suppose I think of newspapers when I think of this metaphor. I remember liking the feel of the newspaper and reading from it. I also didn't mind the smell all that much, but nowadays I get all my news from the internet. Newspapers cost money and the internet is technically free (if you don't count the internet bill) and its basically the same type of news you would receive on the newspaper as you would see it online. There's also the easy of navigating through news headline links on the internet as opposed to flipping pages and unfolding them with using the newspaper. Also the comments section can be funny and the debates that go on can also be quite entertaining, yet I haven't really seen the death of newspaper either. It is still around for those who still prefer it over any other medium. Other than that, I'm not quite sure... of how I can think of the relationship of print and the internet in relation to the metaphor that is given.
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