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June 21, 2005

Some interesting comments on writing (and rewriting) stories through a storyworld:

We all know that in the digital age, the news media are growing more fluid every day. If a print newspaper or magazine makes an error, they run a correction the next day or the next month -- but if a blogger makes an error, he or she can fix it immediately. The continual rebirth of the Star Wars films suggests that art is moving in the same direction. As the popular films, TV shows, and other narratives that function as cultural reference points for billions of people go digital, they are becoming far more than static artifacts -- they're living stories that can evolve in the telling and re-telling. It's almost reminiscent of the way oral epics like the Iliad evolved as they were transmitted from bard to bard. Add elements like fanfic and transmedia storytelling and you may get something even more potent: a society that continually creates and recreates its narratives in multiple media, with multiple storylines and multiple authors.

Which version of each Star Wars movie is the "real" one? It doesn't matter anymore. What matters is how the version you're watching at any given moment fits into the grander mythos that Lucas is still spinning.
ech Coast - George Lucas: The New Bard" href="http://wade.trblogs.com/archives/2005/06/george_lucas_th.html?trk=nl">Tech Coast - George Lucas: The New Bard

And a previous post by Henry Jenkins:
Many of our best authors, from William Faulkner to J.R.R. Tolkien, understood their art in terms of world-creation and developed rich environments which could, indeed, support a variety of different characters. For most of human history, it would be taken for granted that a great story would take many different forms, enshrined in stain glass windows or tapestries, told through printed words or sung by bards and poets, or enacted by traveling performers. Sequels aren't inherently bad-remember that Huckleberry Finn was a sequel to Tom Sawyer. But Twain understood what modern storytellers seem to have forgotten-a compelling sequel offers consumers a new perspective on the characters, rather than just more of the same.

Originally posted by sfisher from USC Interactive Media Division Weblog, remediated by yatta on Jun 21, 2005 at 12:49 PM