arrive at parents house
1 2024-11-05T18:39:15+00:00 Daniel McFarlane 0a112c05d7175375829d6ec79551504f583bce65 229 1 Daniel plain 2024-11-05T18:39:15+00:00 Daniel McFarlane 0a112c05d7175375829d6ec79551504f583bce65This page is referenced by:
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2024-11-05T19:07:10+00:00
Immersion and Design Work
8
plain
2024-11-09T16:08:20+00:00
Build a scalar page in which you discuss how the interactive work immerses its player/reader.
- Use (and cite) the idea in the assigned quotation to prompt your discussion.
- Include and analyze at least 2 images from the image bank.
- Try to use some principles of rhetorical analysis (audience, purpose, context, design) to help you make your case (see Writer/designer handout on Canvas).
* * * * * 1. Group 1: “C ya laterrr” and Murray
“A good story serves the same purpose for adults, giving us something safely outside ourselves (because it is made up by someone else) upon which we can project our feelings. Stories evoke our deepest fears and desires because they inhabit this magical borderland. . . . we have to keep the virtual world "real" by keeping it "not there." We have to keep it balanced squarely on the enchanted threshold without letting it collapse onto either side. (Murray 99 – p 2 of pdf)
2. Group 2: “Motions” and Murray
When we enter a fictional world, we do not merely "suspend" a critical faculty; we also exercise a creative faculty. We do not suspend disbelief so much as we actively create belief Because of our desire to experience immersion, we focus our attention on the enveloping world and we use our intelligence to reinforce rather than to question the reality of the experience. (Murray 110—p.7 of pdf)
3. Group 3: “C ya Laterrrr” and Frasca
Instead of being "inside the skin" of the character, he encouraged having a critical distance that would let them understand their role.
Brazilian dramatist Augusto Boal (1971) took Brecht's ideas even further by creating a set of
techniques, known as the "Theater of the Oppressed"(TO), that tear down the stage's "fourth wall." Boal's main goal is to foster critical thinking and break the actor/spectator dichotomy by creating the "spect-actor," a new category that integrates both by giving them active participation in the play. (88)
4. Group 4: "Motions" and Murray
“This is why the process [of the forum play] is repeated several times, always offering a new perspective on the subject. In Boal's (1992) own words: "It is more important to achieve good debate than a good solution." It is central to stress that Boal uses theater as a tool. not as a goal per se. In other words, the ultimate objective of Forum Theater plays is not to produce beautiful or enjoyable performances, but rather to promote critical discussions among the participants. Unlike traditional theater that offers just one complete, dosed sequence of actions, Forum Theater sessions show multiple perspectives on a particular problem.” (Frasca 89)
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2024-11-05T18:45:00+00:00
c ya laterrrr Group 1
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Daniel, Roxana, Stephanie, Epiphany
plain
2024-11-05T19:06:35+00:00
1. group 1
“C ya laterrr” and Murray
“A good story serves the same purpose for adults, giving us something safely outside ourselves (because it is made up by someone else) upon which we can project our feelings. Stories evoke our deepest fears and desires because they inhabit this magical borderland. . . . we have to keep the virtual world "real" by keeping it "not there." We have to keep it balanced squarely on the enchanted threshold without letting it collapse onto either side. (Murray 99 – p 2 of pdf)
Image 1
Daniel: The use of "you" forces players to imagine themselves in the same situation which creates a more personal experience.
Roxana: Wow I agree, players may think about how they would react if it was their own sibling.
Stephanie: So true, reactions in the game may differ from our own reactions or may be the same.
Epiphany: It was too long!!!!!!!
Daniel: Hmmmm, rather than just trying to understand someone else's experience, players relate the story to themselves.
Image 2
Roxana: Even though there are multiple options, they often lead to the same thing.
Stephanie: You have to go through all the options before you move on.
Epiphany: Often times, there is a "correct" option even though it appears like there are multiple.
Daniel: The different option makes the reader consider what the author may have chose.
Roxana: Even though the different options makes it feel more immersive, there some distance that is created by the supposed "correct" options.