Conceptualizing Transmedia Scholarship
Conceptualizing Transmedia Scholarship
Our project was born out of a desire both to revisit Janet Murray's theorization of "procedural authorship," and to consider if the principles and key concepts that underpin transmedia storytelling might be fruitfully applied to emergent forms of multimodal scholarship. The goals of this project are twofold:
- To present keywords and principles that might help us conceptualize "transmedia scholarship," speculate on argumentative affordances, engage with barriers, and offer examples of these principles in practice.
- To engage with the potentialities and limitations of emergent platforms, like Scalar, that might facilitate procedural scholarship or aide in the construction of transmedia scholarship.
Because this project was conceived as a series of terminological provocations, structured around keywords and principles rather than limited as a rigid linear argument, the material is presented here with minimal suggested directed trails through the content; it is our hope that each reader will explore the gathered material in her own way, mapping new routes and generating new connections on each visit. Through this resistance to linearity, it is our hope that the project embodies the transmedia ideal of the refusal of traditional textual hierarchies.
As an alternate starting point beyond the main path on which you are on, we offer the following suggested path through the keywords of the project:
As an alternate starting point beyond the main path on which you are on, we offer the following suggested path through the keywords of the project:
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