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MULTIMODAL PEDAGOGIES, PROCESSES AND PROJECTS: WRITING TEACHERS KNOW MORE THAN WE MAY THINK ABOUT TEACHING MULTIMODAL COMPOSITIONGordon, Jessica B 01 January 2017 (has links)
Multimodal writing refers to texts that use more than one communicative mode to convey information. While there is much scholarship that examines the history of alphabetic writing instruction and the alphabetic composing processes of students, little research explores the historical origins of multimodal composition and the processes in which students engage as they compose multimodal texts. This two-part project takes a fresh approach to studying multimodal writing by exploring the multimodal pedagogies of ancient Greek and Roman rhetoric and writing teachers, analyzing the role of mental and physical images in modern writers’ composing practices, and investigating contemporary students’ processes for composing multimodal texts.
In Part I, I re-imagine the history of multimodal writing by exploring the multimodal pedagogies that instructors of rhetoric and writing developed during Greek and Roman Antiquity, and I show how contemporary students use an array of multimodal composing processes that rely on both mental and physical images to write alphabetic text. In Part II, I share the results of a case study in which I investigate the processes students use to compose audio- and video-essays while enrolled in a multimodal writing course. This study explores what students know about multimodal writing before beginning the course, how they learn the software needed to compose these projects, the challenges students experience as they compose, and the similarities and differences students perceive between their own processes for composing alphabetic and multimodal texts.
Ultimately, I argue that composition teachers must acknowledge our long history of teaching with multimodal pedagogies and our experience composing alphabetic text through multimodal processes. Recognizing this lengthy history will decrease the anxiety that many composition teachers experience when tasked with teaching multimodal writing because, while typically only time and experience can grow confidence, in this case, a recognition of how much we already know will allow us to teach with the self-assurance we have earned.
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Out of the Margins: Evolving Narrative Representation of Women in Video GamesLucas, Rowan 01 January 2019 (has links)
This thesis examines narrative representation of female characters in video games and how game narratives and representations contribute to socio-cultural discourse. First, this thesis explores and defines the cultural background for female representation in video games. It then defines video games as a type of text and describes the features that are unique to games, such as the use of avatars, and what impacts these features have on game narratives. The thesis attempts to establish evidence of an evolutionary arc of comprehensive female representation in video games by first exploring historical female narrative tropes, and then comparing them to narrative case studies of female characters within five recent game titles (Tomb Raider, Bayonetta, Dragon Age, Hellblade: Senua’s Sacrifice, and Horizon: Zero Dawn). In these case studies, the implications for their representations of female characters are analyzed in the context of socio-cultural discourse. Furthermore, this thesis argues for the importance of diverse representation within video games as a form of media, and as cultural objects that contribute to social discourse.
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Bending Educational RealityRafehi, Mariam 01 January 2019 (has links)
Virtual reality (VR), an emergent technology, affords experiential content delivery in education by evoking emotive responses in users, which can be prohibitive via traditional media. This thesis explores VR for the development of grit – passion and perseverance, which are essential characteristics in education and long-term success. The research proposes design strategies to stimulate senses for emotional engagement and a physiological response. In the project, two interactive environments position the user in emotional states to build passion and perseverance. To develop passion, the virtual world is designed to engage in creativity using 3D-spatial audio and visual effects. In contrast, to build perseverance users are exposed to a challenging environment that requires them to overcome and positively associate frustration with growth. This thesis demonstrates the potential of design for higher sense-stimulation applied through VR in education.
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Unending trails: Oklahoma-as-Indian-territory in performance, print, and digital archivesShook, Jennifer E. 01 August 2016 (has links)
Far from vanishing as romantically predicted, Native being remains present despite centuries’ efforts of erasure. Far from empty space or a blank page, the state of Oklahoma has always been and continues to be a site of transcultural negotiations. Native playwrights unghost—make visible—those shimmering glimmers when they re-present historical events. Centering the work of Native playwrights from Oklahoma-as-Indian-Territory, I in turn unghost—recover—the connections between historical crises dramatized by Native poets and playwrights and reenacted by historical interpreters in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, with nineteenth century archives and circulations. I elucidate a new genealogy of Oklahoma-as-Indian-Territory, where borders bend in genre, time, and space. The Native plays here share a time-weaving relationship to earlier historical crises, a resistance to false closure, a recycling of time-worn stereotypes in the service of their undoing. Unghosting Native playwrights can mean reviving those who have fallen out of print, as with Red Renaissance prodigy Hanay Geiogamah, and reclaiming those whose Native identity has been erased, as with Lynn Riggs, whose Green Grow the Lilacs became the largely unsung foundation of the musical Oklahoma!, as well as expanding the dramatic archive to capture plays only found online.
My first chapter, “Staking Claims on Mixed-Blood Inheritance,” draws upon performance theorists Diana Taylor and Rebecca Schneider’s work in transcultural written and bodily archives to investigate two key repeated performances: the statehood mock wedding and the Land Run reenactments recently discontinued by the Oklahoma City Public Schools but still celebrated annually by schoolchildren across the state. Juxtaposing them with commemorative poetic performances by Diane Glancy, N. Scott Momaday, Joy Harjo, and LeAnne Howe, I situate these performances not as quirky local fun but as rituals of systemic colonial representational power. My second chapter, “Active States,” unghosts folk drama through Lynn Riggs’ pre-statehood play Green Grow the Lilacs and the collaboratively revised Trail of Tears outdoor spectacle produced for decades by the Cherokee Nation, including the extended material performances of these texts in playbills, a songbook, and a fine press illustrated edition. My third chapter, “Kitchen Table Worlds in Motion: Collaborations in Native New Play Development” examines four recent plays and the development institutions that support them, all breaking new ground in form yet recycling images and adapting texts and experiences from many archives: Hanay Geiogamah’s Foghorn, LeAnne Howe’s The Mascot Opera: A Minuet, Diane Glancy’s Pushing the Bear, and Joy Harjo’s Wings of Night Sky, Wings of Morning Light. My fourth and final chapter continues the exploration of recent work, yet on specific policy issues: the stolen bodies of residential schools and of looted funerary remains, and the ongoing repercussions of these instances of cultural genocide in courts and heritage sites today, as dramatized by Mary Kathryn Nagle and Suzan Shown Harjo in My Father’s Bones, Annette Arkeketa in Ghost Dance, and N. Scott Momaday’s in The Moon in Two Windows.
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Sky Rising: An Examination of YA Steampunk Literature Exploring Themes of Prejudice, Power, and MoralityCragun, Hailey 01 August 2017 (has links)
The creative writing is preceded by a critical introduction that explores the history of the steampunk genre, the YA literature movement, and many novels and short stories in both genres. The critical introduction establishes genre guidelines and expectations, as well as provides examples for important qualities of the genre.
The nature of the story required additional research into steam engines, WWI history, the RMS Olympic, tree climbing ascension techniques, and various other subjects. This informal research was used to improve the descriptions of technology in the creative work, as well as the naval terminology and battle tactics performed by steam powered ships before and during the first World War. Though not a historical novel, this information assists in building a believable steampunk world.
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Figurennetzwerke als Ähnlichkeitsmaß / Character networks as a measure of similarityReger, Isabella January 2016 (has links) (PDF)
Die vorliegende Arbeit lässt sich dem Bereich der quantitativen Literaturanalyse zuordnen und verfolgt das Ziel, mittels computergestützter Verfahren zu untersuchen, inwieweit sich Romane hinsichtlich ihrer Figurenkonstellation ähneln. Dazu wird die Figurenkonstellation, als wichtiges strukturgebendes Ordnungsprinzip eines Romans, als soziales Netzwerk der Figuren operationalisiert. Solche Netzwerke können unter Anwendung von Verfahren des Natural Language Processing automatisch aus dem Text erstellt werden.
Als Datengrundlage dient ein Korpus von deutschsprachigen Romanen aus dem 19. Jahrhundert, das mit automatischen Verfahren zur Figurenerkennung und Koreferenzauflösung prozessiert und manuell nachkorrigiert wurde, um eine möglichst saubere Datenbasis zu schaffen.
Ausgehend von der intensiven vergleichenden Betrachtung der Figurenkonstellationen von Fontanes "Effi Briest" und Flauberts "Madame Bovary" wurde in einer manuell erstellten Distanzmatrix die menschliche Intuition solcher Ähnlichkeit zwischen allen Romanen des Korpus festgehalten, basierend auf der Lektüre von Zusammenfassungen der Romane. Diese Daten werden als Evaluationsgrundlage genutzt.
Mit Hilfe von Methoden der sozialen Netzwerkanalyse können strukturelle Eigenschaften dieser Netzwerke als Features erhoben werden. Diese wurden anschließend zur Berechnung der Kosinusdistanz zwischen den Romanen verwendet.
Obwohl die automatisch erstellten Netzwerke die Figurenkonstellationen der Romane im Allgemeinen gut widerspiegeln und die Netzwerkfeatures sinnvoll interpretierbar sind, war die Korrelation mit der Evaluationsgrundlage niedrig. Dies legt die Vermutung nahe, dass neben der Struktur der Figurenkonstellation auch wiederkehrende Themen und Motive die Erstellung der Evaluationsgrundlage unterbewusst beeinflusst haben.
Daher wurde Topic Modeling angewendet, um wichtige zwischenmenschliche Motive zu modellieren, die für die Figurenkonstellation von Bedeutung sein können. Die Netzwerkfeatures und die Topic-Verteilung wurden in Kombination zur Distanzberechnung herangezogen. Außerdem wurde versucht, jeder Kante des Figurennetzwerks ein Topic zuzuordnen, das diese Kante inhaltlich beschreibt. Hier zeigte sich, dass einerseits Topics, die sehr spezifisch für bestimmte Texte sind, und andererseits Topics, die über alle Texte hinweg stark vertreten sind, das Ergebnis bestimmen, sodass wiederum keine, bzw. nur eine sehr schwache Korrelation mit der Evaluationsgrundlage gefunden werden konnte.
Der Umstand, dass keine Verbindung zwischen den berechneten Distanzen und der Evaluationsgrundlage gefunden werden konnte, obwohl die einzelnen Features sinnvoll interpretierbar sind, lässt Zweifel an der Evaluationsmatrix aufkommen. Diese scheint stärker als zu Beginn angenommen unterbewusst von thematischen und motivischen Ähnlichkeiten zwischen den Romanen beeinflusst zu sein. Auch die Qualität der jeweiligen Zusammenfassung hat hier einen nicht unwesentlichen Einfluss. Daher wäre eine weniger subjektiv geprägte Möglichkeit der Auswertung von Nöten, beispielsweise durch die parallele Einschätzung mehrerer Annotatoren. Auch die weitere Verbesserung von NLP-Verfahren für literarische Texte in deutscher Sprache ist ein Desideratum für anknüpfende Forschungsansätze. / This thesis is a work in the field of Digital Literary Studies with the goal of computationally analyzing the similarity of novels with regard to their character constellation. The character constellation, as an important structural arrangement in a novel, is operationalized as a social network of these characters. Such networks can be generated automatically from a literary text using Natural Language Processing techniques.
The work is based on a corpus of German novels of the 19th century that have been preprocessed using automatic methods of character identification and coreference resolution. The results have been manually corrected in order to ensure the best possible data quality.
Starting from an intensive comparative contemplation of the character constellations in “Effi Briest” by Theodor Fontane and “Madame Bovary” by Gustave Flaubert, a distance matrix capturing the human intuition of similarity between character constellations of different novels was devised manually, based on summaries of the respective novels. This distance matrix serves as a means of evaluation.
Using methods of social network analysis, structural properties of character networks can be modeled as features and used to compute cosine distances between the novels.
The automatically generated networks are generally an adequate representation of the character constellations of the novels and the network features are meaningfully interpretable. Nevertheless, the correlation with the evaluation matrix was low. This raises the assumption that, apart from the structure of the character constellation, other properties such as recurring themes or motives may have subconsciously influenced the manual creation of the evaluation matrix.
Therefore, topic modeling was used to represent important interpersonal motives that might be of importance for the character constellation. The network features and the topic distribution were used in combination for the computation of distances. Moreover, each edge in a character network was associated with a topic, trying to describe the kind of the relation. It could be observed that the result is heavily influenced on the one hand by topics that are very specific for a single text and on the other hand by topics featured strongly in all texts, so that, again, no or only a very weak correlation with the evaluation matrix could be found.
The fact that there was no obvious relation between the computed distances and the manual distance matrix, even though the individual features are meaningfully interpretable, raises doubts about the evaluation matrix. It seems to be more strongly influenced by subconscious thematic and motivic similarities between the novels than assumed. The quality and extent of the respective summaries used in the creation of the manual matrix also have a substantial influence. Hence, a less subjective way of evaluation is needed, for example by parallel estimation of the distances by several annotators. Further improvement of the quality of NLP methods for literary texts in German is also a desideratum for following research.
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Memorality: The Future of Our Digital SelvesMyra, Jess January 2013 (has links)
Digital Immortality or Not?The aim of this thesis was to explore how we might be stewards for our post-life digital self after physical death, and to provide a new interaction experience in the form of a tangible, digital, or service design solution. Prior to the project kick-off secondary research, including academic research papers, analogous services, and existing projects, was distilled to form topical questions. These questions were then presented in many casual topical conversations and revealed that although post-life digital asset management awareness is increasing, little consideration exists on how to reflect legacies into the future long after death. A second stage of primary research included multiple on-site investigations, paired with in-person interviews and a quantitative online survey. Insights and understandings then lead to initial concepts that were tested to address distinctive qualities between tangible and digital design solutions. The main findings included that although people want to be remembered long after they die, current methods of tangible and digital content management can not sufficiently support the reflection of legacies long into the future. In conclusion, this thesis argues that to become part of an everlasting legacy, the interaction experience can leverage commonalities and shared moments from life events captured in digital media. These points of connections rely on associated metadata (i.e. keyword tags, date stamps, geolocation) to align relevant moments that transcend time and generations. The solution proposed here harnesses the benefits that both digital and tangible media afford and are presented as a tablet interface with an associated tangible token used as a connection key.
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Genre trouble : embodied cognition in fabliaux, chivalric romance, and Latin chronicleWidner, Michael 03 July 2014 (has links)
This dissertation examines the intersection between theories of body and of genre through the lens of cognitive science. It focuses, in particular, on representations of bodies in exemplars of fabliaux in Old French and Middle English, chivalric romance that feature the figure of Sir Gawain, and the Latin Chronicle of Bury St Edmunds. This dissertation establishes genre theory on cognitive-scientific ground by considering how embodied cognition influences both theories of genre and the representations of bodies. It argues that, rather than a container into which works fit, genre is a network of associations created in the minds of authors and audiences. This network finds expression in the bodies of characters, which differ across genres. It argues, moreover, that genre and bodies influence, in fundamental ways, interpretations of literary works. Finally, this work discusses the possibilities for future research using methods for quantitative textual analysis and data visualization common in the digital humanities. / text
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Digital Narratives and Linguistic Articulations of Mexican Identities in Emergent Media: Race, Lucha Libre Masks and Mock SpanishCalleros Villarreal, Daniel January 2015 (has links)
This project examines the articulation of Mexican identities in digital narratives through a variety of genres, bringing into conversation various disciplines to present more comprehensive studies on the construction of representational paradigms, their consumption and social impact and their association with other cultural and literary texts. Deploying a multidisciplinary approach, this work articulates a theoretical framework that incorporates the fields of semiology, postcolonial theory, visual culture, urban studies, ludology, linguistic anthropology and border studies. This project analyzes the processes through which the identities of Mexican subjects and the depiction of Mexican spaces are articulated in new digital narratives in the form video games as mass culture objects, which are conceived from hegemonic loci of production, are globally consumed and have the potential to transmit deeply rooted social knowledge. Furthermore, the lack of spaces in which represented minorities may counter the stereotypical images projected forecloses dialogic processes. Through the agglomeration of different representational modules (visual units, narrative elements and linguistic portrayals) different genres impose predisposed rhetorical framework and found that the vast majority share a predetermined collection of elements that create a representational mosaic of how "Mexicanness" should be depicted and perceived. Furthermore, said digital subject representations enact cultural ideological frameworks that are imposed onto the audience, influencing meaning-formation processes. This work also analyzes the dynamics between the production, representation and consumption of videogames and traces tangents with the social and historical contexts of earlier visual media in Latin America.
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The Life and Letters of Prince Edward Island Proprietor Captain John MacDonald of Glenaladale: An Exercise in Humanities ComputingGillis, Roger January 2007 (has links)
The introduction of the Internet and the World Wide Web has been one the most significant developments of the last decade. Many historians have approached the Web with reluctance, hesitant to use it to conduct their traditional scholarly tasks of researching, publishing, and teaching history. Communication theorists such as Harold Innis and Marshall McLuhan foretold many aspects of the Web’s impact in their analyses of past communication media. Applied to the Web, their ideas provide a deeper understanding of what a new medium of communication might mean for scholars in humanities disciplines. Indeed, in the last decade the term “Humanities Computing” has been coined to describe efforts to apply computer methods to humanities data.
This thesis explores some of the processes and potential of Humanities Computing as it pertains to the presentation of primary documents on the Web. It takes the form of a case study using the correspondence of eighteenth-century Prince Edward Island land proprietor John MacDonald (1742-1810), a central figure in the conflict between the Island government and the land proprietors. MacDonald took an active interest in his land on the Island and became the voice of landowners making their case to the British crown. Digitized letters drawn from his correspondence will be featured on the Web as part of the Atlantic Canada Virtual Archives, making use of the Web as an alternative to print in presenting, analyzing, and interpreting history. The digitization of the MacDonald letters is an exercise in Humanities Computing through the application of current Web and digital technology to primary source material, which, in turn, demonstrates the benefits of doing research on the Web.
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