Part 2. Project 4. Shimabuku’s Cucumber Journey

My first task within this project is to read chapter ‘Room Seven: Itinerancy’ of the course set textbook with focus on the ‘Cucumber Journey’. I am to examine how time, place and journey have an impact on the work.

Firstly, even after having completed the initial module on contemporary art, I do not see how pickling vegetables whilst travelling on a canal is art. I just can’t wrap my head around it. Seriously, is this one of those questions that they post in newspapers as recruitment advertisements for Mi5?

  The last line on page 156 summed up for me the ludicrous nature of this as an item of art, ‘the pickles will begin a new journey in peoples bodies’. There is probably a school of thought that as the pickle is broken down by the bodies enzymes and turned into kinetic energy that we use that energy to plant crops of new cucumbers and so a cycle of life is complete. There is also a school of thought that the Earth is flat and magic is real, but, I will try…

  Time is of relevance to this piece because with the passing of time not only the location but the form of vegetable itself changes. As the canal boat travels from London to Birmingham so the cucumber travels from a fresh state to a pickled one. This is reminiscent of how people travel through life, fresh and ‘green’ as described by Dylan Thomas in ‘Fern Hill’ , and, with the passing of time as they complete lifes journey, they slowly pickle in a marinade of experience and outside influence until they die and are returned to the soil. (To fertilise new crops of cucumbers I have no doubt…). One could argue that if a pickled cucumber is what exists when the canal boat reaches Birmingham, was there ever a fresh cucumber in London? With each passing moment the cucumber steadily ages, in this case in an artificially speeded up process. This could be seen as a reflection of society today. We live in a consumerist culture where companies are concerned only about making money and stress related mental health issues are at their peak, are we all being pickled in the vinegar of our everyday lives? The only way I can see that Place would be of relevance is to reiterate that in each location the cucumber was in a different form? In London it was a fresh vegetable, in Birmingham it was a cucumber. During the journey of the canal boat so too was taking place the journey of the cucumber?

Part 2. Project 3. Exercise 3

For this exercise I am to carry out a close reading of Fern Hill by Dylan Thomas. I am then to answer the following questions;

  • What’s the mood of the poem? How does it make you feel?
  • What poetic devices does Thomas use and what effect do they have on the poem?
  • How do the poetic devices help to evoke the sense of time and place? Can you identify any other theme running through this poem?
  • What is the poem saying about itme and place? (and any other theme you’ve identified)
  • What lines or images stay with you? What do they remind you of or how do they make you feel?
  • Whats the rhythm like? Is it choppy or is it flowing and smooth? How does they rhthym ipact on the poem?
  • Is the ‘speaker’ important? What are his views? Are they apparent or inferred?
  • Are there any lines that you don’t get? Can you hazard a guess as to what they mean or allude too?

Thomas, D. and Thomas, F. (2019). Fern Hill Poem by Dylan Thomas – Poem Hunter. [online] PoemHunter.com. Available at: https://www.poemhunter.com/poem/fern-hill/ [Accessed 18 Jul. 2019].

To try and show where I have identified poetic devices I have used a combination of italics or bold writing on each line. The poetic device identified is then in brackets.

Fern Hill – Poem by Dylan Thomas

Now as I was young and easy under the apple boughs
About the lilting house and happy as the grass was green, (similie), (alliteration)
The night above the dingle starry,
Time let me (personification) hail and climb
Golden in the heydays of his eyes, (personification)
And honoured among wagons I was prince of the apple towns (metaphor)
And once below a time I lordly had the trees and leaves
Trail with daisies and barley
Down the rivers of the windfall light.

And as I was green and carefree, famous among the barns (metaphor)
About the happy yard and singing as the farm was home (similie)
In the sun that is young once only,
Time let me (personification)  play and be
Golden in the mercy of his means, (personification) , (alliteration)
And green and golden I was huntsman and herdsman (metaphor), (alliteration) the calves
Sang to my horn (similie), the foxes on the hills barked clear and
cold,
And the sabbath rang slowly (metaphor)
In the pebbles of the holy streams.

All the sun long it was running, it was lovely, the hay
Fields high as the house (alliteration) (metaphor) , the tunes from the chimneys, it was air
And playing, lovely and watery
And fire green as grass.  (alliteration) (metaphor)
And nightly under the simple stars (alliteration)
As I rode to sleep the owls were bearing the farm away,
All the moon long I heard, blessed among stables, the nightjars
Flying with the ricks, and the horses
Flashing into the dark.

And then to awake, and the farm, like a wanderer white (similie), (alliteration)
With the dew, come back, the cock on his shoulder (personification): it was all
Shining, it was Adam and maiden, (metaphor)
The sky gathered again
And the sun grew round that very day.
So it must have been after the birth of the simple light (similie)
In the first, spinning place, the spellbound horses walking
warm , (alliteration)
Out of the whinnying green stable
On to the fields of praise. (similie)

And honoured among foxes and pheasants by the gay house
Under the new made clouds and happy as the heart was long, (similie)
In the sun born over and over,
I ran my heedless ways,
My wishes raced through the house high hay (metaphor)
And nothing I cared, at my sky blue trades, that time allows
In all his tuneful turning (personification) so few and such morning songs
Before the childrengreen and golden (alliteration)
Follow him out of grace. (personification)

Nothing I cared, in the lamb white (metaphor) days, that time would
take me
Up to the swallow thronged loft by the shadow of my hand,
In the moon that is always rising,
Nor that riding to sleep
I should hear him fly with (personification) the high fields
And wake to the farm forever fled from (alliteration) the childless land.
Oh as I was young and easy in the mercy of his means,
Time held me green and dying (personification)
Though I sang in my chains like the sea. (similie)

  • Similie –  8
  • Metaphor – 8
  • Personification – 9
  • Alliteration – 12

Whats the mood of the poem?How does it make you feel?

The initial verses of the poem depict fond childhood memories. They seem to rotate around time spent growing up in the countryside, I grew up in the countryside myself so I can understand the sense of freedom and happiness that Dylan puts across.

  As the poem moves into verse 4 the mood of the poem starts to shift. ‘Fern Hill’ seems to depict an entire life cycle within it’s verses. Verse 4 is where I get the first sense of Autumn setting in, the rhythm of the poem seems to subtly speed up although I can’t quite put my finger on why I get that impression!

  The poem makes me feel sad. It reminds me of the awesome childhood I had and that, for me, further reinforces the sense that I have wasted years of my life in military engineering. It’s to start escaping from that, that I signed up for a Creative Arts degree! It won’t be the complete answer but I’m hoping it’ll be a gateway qualification into something a lot more satisfying. So for me personally, reading this poem is like rubbing salt in a wound, not an experience I enjoy.

  • What poetic devices does Thomas use and what effect do they have on the poem?

There are several poetic devices within this poem which I managed to spot. I can sense that there are others which are currently alluding me so I will keep coming back to it.

  The use of alliteration and personification is most prevalent (from what I’ve picked out so far). The use of personification in relation to the figure ‘time’ describes it as something of a kindly protector, reminds me of an Uncle? Something which allows the author of the poem to enjoy the freedom of the childhood at Fern Hill without the imposition of the outside world ruining that innocent era.

  The alliteration seems, to me, to be where I would normally expect to see more obvious rhyming words? Maybe it’s being used to have a similar effect?

  The metaphors and similes are used to increase the engagement of the reader with the authors narrative. By describing feelings and attitudes of youth with metaphor it becomes something more easily imaginable and identifiable by the reader.

  • How do the poetic devices help to evoke the sense of time and place? Can you identify any other theme running through this poem?

Time and place are key themes to this poem, in addition to this I also feel that Nostalgia plays a strong part.

 The description of childhood sensations and experiences through the use of simile and metaphor allow the reader to very easily identify with the author at the approximate age the poem is set at, the spring of youth.

  • What is the poem saying about time and place? (and any other theme you’ve identified)

The poem is saying that time passes, that while you sleep, both literally and metaphorically, seasons pass and time goes on. Place is somewhere that can be immortalised in memory even though the passage of time may render that place a different experience. An example of this is Chernobyl. Chernobyl was once a thriving vibrant community but due to just one event, the idea of the place will forever be associated with one particular moment in time until perhaps we have moved beyond living memory.

 Nostalgia can be both a blessing and a curse. In this poem, it seems to be a blessing. The reminiscing of the experience at Fern Hill is described as a golden age, and not one to be mourned, for without it there would be no author to tell the story.

  • What lines or images stay with you? What do they remind you of or how do they make you feel?

After reading the poem I am left with an image of a sun-soaked countryside farm with animals, trees to climb, wildflowers growing and big open skies. The poem reminds me of growing up in the countryside, of long summers and endless possibilities. It makes me feel homesick (I’m currently working through this module sat on a desolate barren island in the South Atlantic) and nostalgic in equal measure.

  • What’s the rhythm like? Is it choppy or is it flowing and smooth? How does they rhythm impact on the poem?

The rhythm of the poem is smooth but it does get faster as the verses go on. I couldn’t figure out why so I did some further reading on the Internet. At the webpage address https://poemanalysis.com/fern-hill-by-dylan-thomas-poem-analysis I read that it is the frequent use of the word ‘and’ at the start of sentences that contributes to the speed of the verse. In the article it is likened to a child gabbling through a tory in order to tell the entire tale.

  • Is the ‘speaker’ important? What are his views? Are they apparent or inferred?

The speaker is essential to the poem. Fern Hill is a poem about childhood memory and nostalgia told from the viewpoint of the author, without the ‘speaker’ there is nothing to the poem.

  The views of the speaker are apparent rather than inferred. Word choice throughout the whole piece describes the time and place of Fern Hill as being a positive experience. Specific word choices such as ‘green and carefree’, and ‘happy as the heart was long’ confirm this overall impression of positivity.

  • Are there any lines that you don’t get? Can you hazard a guess as to what they mean or allude too?

There were a couple of lines which I did not understand.

  1. The night above the dingle starry, – I Google searched the word ‘dingle to discover that it means a small wooded hollow.
  2. blessed among stables, the nightjars flying with the ricks – I Google searched the word ‘nightjars’ to discover that it is a type of nocturnal bird

 Now that I understand these lines I re-read the poem and noticed something that hadn’t really registered before. The poem starts with quite a strong sense of realism. As it moves through to night time the description of the place becomes slightly more surreal. It is as though the concept of Fern Hill at that time and place is not just evolving to represent a life cycle but quite literally slipping away like a memory. The line that finally made me twig was “the nightjars flying with the ricks”. I’m assuming that by ‘ricks’ Dylan Thomas is referring to hayricks otherwise I imagine this is becoming quite a strange analysis of the poem!

Part 2. Project 3. Exercise 2

In this exercise I am to put what I have learnt about poetic devices into practice by studying other creative writing.

I started by visiting http://www.poetry.org/shakespeare.htm and looking at a copy of Seven Ages of Man by William Shakespeare.

Poetry.org. (2019). Poetry.org – William Shakespeare. [online] Available at: http://www.poetry.org/shakespeare.htm [Accessed 18 Jul. 2019].

Similie – I’m fairly confident I’ve picked out the Similies.

Metaphor – Initially I confused these with the Similies as opposed to the more definitie ‘giving it the identity of something else’

Consonance – I wasn’t sure about the Consonance. I think I’m right in highlighting the repetition of the letter ‘S’. I’m not so sure about my highlighting of the letter ‘L’.

Alliteration – Initially I thought that the words which started with the same initial sound had to be next to each other in the line for it to count as an example of Alliteration. When I re-read the definition in the course guide I realised it can be ‘two or more words in a line of poetry that begin with the same initial sound’. This made it easier to identify the lines in question.

Assonance – This one was completely new to me. I think I’ve correctly identified some examples of assonance…

Seven Ages Of Man by William Shakespeare

All the world’s a stage, (metaphor)
And all the men and women merely players, (metaphor)
They have their exits and entrances, (alliteration)
And one man in his time plays many parts, (alliteration), (consonance)
His acts being seven ages. At first the infant, (consonance), (metaphor)
Mewling and puking in the nurse’s arms. (assonance)
Then, the whining schoolboy with his satchel (assonance), (alliteration)
And shining morning face, creeping like snail (assonance), (alliteration)
Unwillingly to school. And then the lover,
Sighing like furnace, with a woeful ballad (similie)
Made to his mistress’ eyebrow. Then a soldier, (alliteration)
Full of strange oaths, and bearded like the pard, (similie)
Jealous in honour, sudden, and quick in quarrel,
Seeking the bubble reputation
Even in the cannon’s mouth. And then the justice (assonance)
In fair round belly, with good capon lin’d, (assonance)
With eyes severe, and beard of formal cut, (assonance)
Full of wise saws, and modern instances,
And so he plays his part. (alliteration)

I am now to ‘pick up a novel and see if you can find any of these devices employed in the text. Why did the writer use it at this particular point? What is its effect on the writing and so on the reader?’

The novel which I have handy is ‘Jamaica Inn’ by Daphne du Maurier and I set about studying the first page. Within it I discovered Similie, Metaphor, Rhyme, Alliteration and Assonance.

 ‘It was a cold grey day in late (Assonance) November. The weather had changed overnight, when a backing wind

When studying this one page closely, I was very surprised by how many poetic devices were used within the text. The first lines assonance sets the rhythm of the coach which is continued throughout the excerpt.

brought a granite sky (metaphor) and a mizzling rain with it, and although it was now only a little after two

The use of the metaphor ‘granite sky’ instantly adds colour to the scene in the readers mind. Everyone has seen granite, the bleak depressing grey springs easily to mind. The comparison of the stormy grey with the time of afternoon normally considered to be when the weather is at it’s best adds further to this impression.

o’clock in the afternoon the pallor of a winter evening seemed to have closed upon the hills, cloaking them in mist. It would be dark by four. The air was clammy cold (Aliteration) and for all the tightly closed windows

The alliteration of ‘clammy’ and ‘cold’ further enhances the perception of the element being described.  

it penetrated the interior of the coach. The leather seats felt damp to the hands, and there must have been a small crack in the roof, because now and again little drips of rain fell softly through, smudging the leather and leaving a dark-blue stain like a splodge of ink (similie). The wind came in gusts, at time

Use of this commonly seen simile helps aid the visual image in the minds eye.

shaking the coach as it travelled round the bend of the road and in the exposed places on the high ground it blew with such force that the whole body of the coach trembled and swayed, rocking between the high wheels like a drunken man (similie). .

This similie is something that everyone can imagine and apply to the idea of a rocking coach. It further enhances the image the author is describing.

The driver, muffled in a greatcoat to his ears, bent almost double in his seat in a faint endeavour to gain shelter  from his own shoulders (Aliteration) , while the dispirited horses plodded sullenly at his command, too broken by the wind and the rain to feel the whip that now and again cracked above their heads, while it swung between the numb fingers of the driver.

The wheels of the coach creaked and groaned as they sank into the ruts on the road, and sometimes they flung up the soft spattered (Aliteration)  mud against the windows, where it mingled with the constant

The alliteration of ‘shelter’ and ‘shoulders, and ‘soft spattered’ provide descriptors but also rhythm within the text. They assist in the depiction of the carriage as a jerky unevenly lurching object across rough terrain.

driving rain, and whatever view there might have been of the countryside was hopelessly obscured.

The few passengers huddled together for warmth, exclaiming in unison when the coach sank into a heavier rut than usual, and one old fellow, who had kept up a constant complaint (Aliteration), ever since he had

The alliteration of “constant complaint’ and ‘fury’ and ‘fumbling’ further assist in describing the rhythm of the coach.

joined the coach at Truro, rose from his seat in a fury; and, fumbling (Aliteration) with the window-sash, let the window down with a crash (Rhyme) bringing a shower of rain in upon himself and his fellow passengers.’

In contrast to the first line of the excerpt in which the rhythm is fairly smooth, the final two lines of my excerpt are incredibly jarring. The use of the rhyme ‘ash’ twice in quick succession is what reinforces this.

Overall there are several poetic devices which I have spotted, all of which are put to work within the text to paint a picture for the reader. Word choices are used to put across the rhythm of the subject they describe, something I would never have noticed if I hadn’t been looking for it.

To be honest I’ve never read this book, I picked it off the shelf at random thinking that I should probably use a ‘proper’ book to work with for a Uni assignment. Studying this first page has got me quite interested in what the rest of the book may offer!

Examples of my own for each poetic device

Rhyme – It’s been four months since I had a well cooked meal, when I get to see real veg again I don’t know how I’ll feel!

Rhythm (excerpt from a nomination that I wrote for a section monthly competition for ‘biggest flapping b***ard award’) –

‘We have a nomination for a brand new category, the biggest flapping b***ard that this place has ever seen, the vein in his head has been throbbing away as day by day the dumpies sweep cobwebs from corners that haven’t seen light since the Argies were here, because dust is what matters right?!’

Repitition – I call this one. ‘A lament to Falkland Islands Internet connectivity’…..Terrible Internet, Terrible Internet, Terrible Internet. 

Aliteration – This is a piece of aliteration used quite widely by the services community. ‘Practice Prevents Piss Poor Performance’

Assonance – diverse iguanas practice guitar intermittently (I think this works as an example?!)

Consonance – Winter Weather thaWs slowly

Onomatopoeia – Plop-Plop-Plop , the sound of the water dripping from the broken water pipe in the corridor..

Personification – My lonely sketchpad sits on my work desk feeling utterly unloved.

Simile – On the morning of the day I leave this place I shall be as high as a kite

Metaphor – His back hair, a furry pelt…..

Part 2. Project 3. Rap or Romantic?

Rap or Romantic?

I have been given 5 lines in this exercise which I must try to guess whether they are excerpts from Rap songs or from Romantic poems.

Her untimely exit from her, heavenly body – Romantic

Five miles meandering with a mazy motion – Rap

Victims of worldly ways, memories stays engraved – Rap

A dead bird flying through a broken sky – Rap

Drive my dead thoughts over the universe – Romantic

Part 2. Project 3. Exercise 1

For this exercise I am to read extracts from three poems; ‘The Herefordshire Landscape’ by Elizabeth Browning, ‘Slough’ by John Betjeman and ‘The Lost Land’ by Eavan Boland.

I am then to answer the following questions;

Which one…

  • Speaks about the place in relation to identity and exile?
  • Purely evokes a sense of place?
  • Makes a social comment about progress and place?

‘The Herefordshire Landscape’ by Elizabeth Browning.

This is my choice for ‘Which one purely evokes a sense of place?’. I chose this because within the excerpt there are only descriptions of sights and smells which relate to the subject.

‘Slough’ by John Betjeman

This is my choice for ‘Which one makes a social comment about progress and place?’. I chose this because within the excerpt there are several refences t the social situation at the time. It is clear that it is set during the war whilst Slough was being bombed. The food convoys were being attacked by the enemy so the country was highly reliant on preserved food. Living under conditions such as these affects peoples mental health which is being alluded to with the last line ‘tinned minds, tinned breath’.

‘The Lost Land’ by Eavan Boland

This is my choice for ‘Which one speaks about place in relation to identity and exile’. I chose this because of the language used by the poet. The excerpt speaks of leaving a loved land, of comparisons between that land and family.

Part 2. Project 2. Exercise 1

Exercise 1 – Choose a novel or a film or a play you love and map it to The Hero’s Journey

I have chosen to use another J.K Rowling creation as I know it quite well, I would have chosen Harry Potter if the course textbook hadn’t used it as an example!

Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them

Act 1

Endangered animal enthusiast and lone wizard, Newt Scamander, The Hero, arrives in New York with a suitcase full of creatures. He travels the world saving endangered animals, restoring them back to their natural environments and gently educating his fellow wizards about them. Carrying out this vocation is hisOrdinary World.

  Newt receives his Call To Adventure on the steps of the bank at which the Salem League is protesting against witches. He is asked if he is a seeker after truth, he is further asked to comment on the idea that witches live amongst the normal humans. Newt refuses to answer and makes a hasty exit in pursuit of one of his escaped creatures. This refusal to interact is Newts Refusal Of The Call.

  Inside the bank he meets Tina Goldstien (Meeting with the Mentor) who will be Newts guide to wizarding America. He is arrested by Goldstien and taken into MACUSA, Crossing The First Thresholdtowards interacting with other wizards, not just animals.

Act 2

As Newt, Jacob and Goldstien travel New York recapturing his escaped creatures their paths begin to cross with MACUSA’s Augustus Graves. Tests Allies and Enemies.

  In his Approach To The Inmost Circle, Newt is questioned by Graves who inadvertently starts to show signs of nefarious intent.

  When Creedence is revealed both as the Obscurous and as a scared boy, Newt tries to save him both from self destruction and from the plotting of Graves who wishes to use Creedence as a weapon. Battling Graves for Creedence’s heart is Newts Ordeal.

  Towards the end of the battle, Newt is losing and will be killed. Creedence intervenes to save him from Graves and at Newts urging, shows mercy. The saving of Creedence’s soul is Newts initial Reward. Graves is unveiled as villain Grindewald further rehabilitating Newt in the eyes of MACUSA.

Act 3

The Road Back for Newt begins with the thanks of the American MACUSA President. He is able to use one of his creatures to wipe the memory of the city thereby enabling the Resurrectionof the magical worlds shroud of secrecy.

  He Returns (to the UK) with the Elixir of the promise of new love.

I am now to use the same stages of A Heroes Journey to create my own story.

Act 1

Ordinary World – A shy bear who is scared of going outside, lives in a playroom.

He likes watching planes through the window, sits in a plane and imagines flying.

Call To Adventure – Invited to a toys picnic in the garden

Refusal of the Call – Says no because scared of outside and doesn’t really know anybody.

Meeting with the Mentor – He meets Bolt the rabbit engineer. Mad Scientist.

Crossing the First Threshold – Leaves his shelf for first time, into Bolts workshop, helps him with inventions?

Act 2

Tests/Allies/Enemies

  • Meets Captain Cassidy and his men (toy soldiers) who go hunting for bits and pieces for Bolt. In exchange Bolt fixes their tanks/rifles/catapults/bodyparts. The soldiers look a bit like worker ants when they drag back the assorted parts.
  • Sees The Cat (enemy) who tries to catch the soldiers and their loot
  • Bear is brave and chases the cat away
  • Gets picked up by The Dog and dropped in the garden – realises it’s a nice place full of sunshine and flowers – nothing to be scared of

Approach to the Inmost Circle – Toys picnic gets chased off by cat, cat eats sandwiches. Bear deploys in Bolts plane with Captain Cassidys men, airdrops soldiers to secure picnic area

Ordeal – Plane breaks, too much weight, Bear parachutes out of plane with picnic, as ‘outside’ as outside can be

Reward – Saves the picnic, lands to a heros welcome, realises everyone likes him

Act 3

The Road Back – Toys get found in garden by child, put in cart and taken back inside….literally giving them a lift

Resurrection – New life as Bolts test pilot

Return With the Elixir – No longer scared of outside, dreams of flying now real, lots of new friends

Part 2. Project 1. Exercise 2

Make a list of everything you’ve read or written or seen or heard in the last 24 hours

What I consider to be stories I have highlighted in bold.

What I consider to be art I have highlighted in italics.

I have read –

  • Start Late and Finish Rich (finance book)
  • Place (set textbook)
  • Creative Arts Today (OCA course PDF)
  • A food menu

I have written –

  • Assignment for Part 1 Contemporary Arts
  • The first exercises in this Part 2
  • A text message to a friend complaining about my boss (haha)
  • A to-do list
  • A passcode for the internet

I have seen –

  • Adult Life Skills (Film)
  • The Great British Sewing Bee (TV)
  • Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (Film)
  • Thor : Ragnorak (Film)
  • Total Recall (Film)
  • News

I have heard –

  • A story about a fight
  • Information about someone else’s marathon

How do you, personally, define a creative artistic piece of writing?

Until I read the essay by Hazel Smith I would have read this question and thought that it applied only to writing fiction and possibly poetry. Now however I am uncomfortably aware that it probably means something a lot more arty and abstract than I want it too! Because of this my definition is now a little les specific than it would have been.

  I define a creative, artistic piece of writing as one in which the author takes the reader away from their current situation and into another moment either remembered or imagined. The words must flow from the page without tripping the eye to allow subconscious transportation.

Part 2. Project 1. Research Point: Hazel Smith

In this exercise I am to read and take notes on an essay by Hazel Smith from the student website. It is entitled ‘Creative Writing and New Media’ in The Cambridge Companion to Creative Writing.

Notes from the essay –

  • Some aspects of new media writing sound fascinating. I am particularly interested in investigating the interactive reading games which require the solving of a puzzle to enable the reading of further text.
  • I would also like to research more into stories with illustrative animation as this links in with an idea that I have for a personal project.
  • Having just finished Part 1 Contemporary Art I’m a little horrified to read that the author has been heavily involved in what can only be described as Contemporary Art installations. I thought I’d escaped all that!
  • The digital revolution will mean great things for creative writing. Access to publishing facilities has been opened up by companies like Amazon so that everyone with enough dedication has the potential to be successful. Books can be carried around more easily, I have a couple of hundred on my e-book reader right this second. Reading has become cheaper, no shipping fees and no costs for the publishing house being built into a book price.
  • Early text-only computer games are being born again

I think that the implications for creative writing from the digital revolution will be positive and far-reaching. The accessibility to the written word that digital technology provides is massive. A video on YouTube is one of many examples detailing how much education has been improved by the introduction on iPads as teaching aids in South Africa.

Young Lives Changed Forever. How the Introduction of the iPad has given life. (2019). [image] Available at: Anon, (2019). [image] Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K2okG0tWphI [Accessed 18 Jul. 2019]. [Accessed 18 Jul. 2019].

I believe that libraries will eventually evolve into places from which you can loan out e-books. Thousands of books can be fitted onto a palm size device and transported across the globe. People will have access to stories and knowledge that may not otherwise have been possible and that is an incredible thing.

I’m a traditional book lover so I hope that they never die out entirely. What’s changed for me personally is that now I only buy books I really love, anything else I download onto my Kindle, this helps save trees and that is something else which makes me happy!

Part 2. Project One. Exercise 1

What happens to a story when you take it from its source, make it permanent in print, and disseminate it to a wide audience?

When a story is taken from it’s source it becomes entirely self reliant, it must contain all the context required to make sense if it is to succeed. When a story is limited to word of mouth in a certain area there may be subtleties or nuances that do not need to be explained.

  A story made permanent in print now becomes frozen in time and will survive in it’s original form. As time passes language may evolve, everyday routines and activities as referred to in the story will change but the story itself will not. Instead it will become a form of a time capsule for future readers. One example of this could be Pride and Prejudice which is still a popular classic.

  When a story is disseminated to a wide audience, particularly far overseas, it carries with it it’s sense of place. It can also then begin to gain mass popularity and traction in the market. One example of this could be the Harry Potter books by JK Rowling, despite being about a boy at school in Scotland they are read worldwide and have been translated into several different languages.

Write a list of implications arising from the printing press. For example, think about who has control/authority over the text, the meaning of the text, and the relationship between the source of the text and it’s recipient.

  • In a country where all the printing press is subject to central control (ie North Korea) the only available news is heavily biased and can lead to misplaced public beliefs. Potential for censoring is high.
  • Freedom of the press, and preferably competing ones at that are required to allow the full range of views to be heard by the general public.
  • General Public are required to look at the source of the information and check for it’s credentials and therefore bias, not just accept whatever they read to be fact. One example of this are the frequent fake news stories on social media website Facebook.
  • The recipient is also required to consider what outcome the originator of the text may have, for example, are they attempting to ignite a social situation or are they reporting facts.
  • Printed words now have the freedom to be sent and received all over the world radically improving communication
  • Educational power. Printed words have the power to educate even when a recipient does not have access to educational facilities (distance learning!)
  • Longevity. Printed words will last for as long as a physical copy of them remains undamaged by misuse or elements.

Part 2. Introduction Exercise

In this intial exercise I am to write down all the lists that I can think of about why people read and write. I am then to see what I notice about the two lists and if any of the entries are duplicated.

Why people read

  • Escapism
  • Entertainment
  • Education (self help and institutional learning)
  • Curiosity
  • Inspiration
  • Relaxation

Why people write

  • To entertain
  • To share knowledge
  • To tell a story that won’t go away
  • To relax
  • To remember events

When looking at my two lists I notice that there are a couple of common factors, entertainment appears on both as does relaxation. I do not think that people are either readers or writers. Everyone is a storyteller of some sort, some people are just better at writing them down than others.