Text Technologies – Making Connections
The following is a summary of my overall learning from the course. The “catch” is that I tried to use all of the tags from the weblog’s tag cloud in order to indicate the making of connections. This was actually a little more challenging than I initially anticipated!
The changing spaces of reading and writing are represented through both text and technology and demonstrate a cultural shift in the way we produce, consume and manipulate words and ideas. Oral cultures, through storytelling, laid the foundation by which future generations would evolve into literate cultures and ultimately, the printing press ensured the immortalization of the written word. Artifacts of the past serve as visual reminders of the changing way in which text is defined and technology is defined. Through technology, the concept of literacy has exploded to encompass multiliteracies in an effort to recognize the different ways we come to read and understand information. Modern affordances of typographic culture, such as the wave we are currently riding referred to as Web 2.0, encompasses the remixes and mash-ups that are blurring the lines between traditional methods and innovation. Moving forward, it is clear that hypertext will continue to redefine the way traditionally stagnant language is represented and ultimately, text technologies will be at the forefront of change in education, communication and, of course, writing itself.
4 comments
1 Catherine Gagnon { 11.26.09 at 12:42 pm }
Well done!
2 Clare Roche { 11.26.09 at 5:30 pm }
This was a really enjoyable experience. Thank you.
3 Erin Gillespie { 11.27.09 at 3:36 am }
Great job, Rachel. This is what our readings and forums and commentaries have all been about, in one way or another. Cheers! Erin
4 Ashley Jones { 11.29.09 at 5:39 pm }
What a great idea Rachel!! Well done!
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