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Literacy in the New Media Agetheoretical study of writing in the digital age
This is an investigation of the effect of new media on what Gunter Kress calls 'alphabetic writing'. He is arguing that multimedia and the screen are starting to challenge the page as the natural medium of writing - and that this in turn is affecting the way we write.
However, he does make the interesting observation that computers put users in charge of page layout in a way which gives new emphasis to design, as well as providing interactivity between writer and reader. Having argued that all texts are a result of ideological relationships between author and reader, he even attempts a quasi-political analysis of punctuation. This is not really persuasive, and founders in his attempts to explain or excuse his examples of what is no more than poor writing. But he does end on an interesting topic of reading paths. That is, the manner in which readers have to construct their own navigational routes when confronting what he calls 'multimodal' texts - ones with pictures and words, such as magazines and web pages, for instance. Although he claims to have left behind an academic style so as to communicate with a wider audience, he writes in a dense and rather abstract manner. The results will be of interest to linguists, educational theorists, and semiologists - though those approaching it with an interest in new media might be a little disappointed. © Roy Johnson 2003 [more WRITING SKILLS books] Gunther Kress, Literacy in the New Media Age, London: Routledge, 2003, pp.186, ISBN 041525356X |
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