Living in the Early Age of the Post Text World.

One advance or change in technology begets another and in that process there are inherent loses and gains. This is the enduring message of ETEC 540. The move to electronic/multimodal/hypermediated text is dependent upon our knowledge and understanding of the printed space of a book (Bolter 28). The printed space, prose, is concerned with enlivening the visual in the reader’s imagination. The move to hypermedia permits the visual to augment prose which in turn alters the purpose of prose. This move also promotes the human tendency for associative thinking. Indeed, in the beginning of this electronic era of text, Bush and Englebart’s claimed that associative information structures are likely to improve human ability to approach and solve complex problems. We can certainly see how the hypertexted format of the web allows us to see “the structural skeleton of the text” with more clarity, and arguably claim that it can communicate more effectively or more vividly, arguable because “whether it’s better is a cultural determination” (Bolter 21-35).

In an informal survey I conducted with my friends and family, ranging in age from 25 – 61 I asked for their thoughts on reading hypertext. Most replied expressing an appreciation for their inclusion, and depending on time and interest followed the link. The older of the group (of 11 respondents) tended to skip the link and double back if interested with the younger following the link in situ finding them “usually pretty relevant and useful”.

Another idea that grabbed my attention was Kress’ notion that “all forms of communication are inherently multimodal, involving the interplay of more than one form of representation”. In other words the acts of production and the consumption of meaning are entangled and understood by its consumer if only in a visceral way. This begs the question, what does it mean to read these multimodal texts? Let’s consider the various forms of digital text, their act of production and the consumption of meaning. A website is written to inform and display information. I believe increasingly that its usefulness is in the ease in which the consumer can access the information they are looking for. Immediacy and efficiency dictate the act of production. Email is the business standard. It is a more formal mode of communication, and because it is less immediate than other forms, it  allows room for reflection and composition. Text messaging is informal, and more immediate. The immediacy (or delayed response) present an array of social implications regarding response time and word choice. Both email and text messaging have given rise to the emoticon to facilitate communication. Facebook/Instagram/Snapchat or other forms of visual/textual communication are guided by creative, humorous and often satirical content. Finally, Twitter.  This is a most interesting multimodal digital text as it is text written to mimic speech. Peter Wikström, in his dissertation  I Tweet like I Talk : Aspects of Speech and Writing on Twitter discusses this twist: “the oral qualities of Twitter text are real but virtual, and actually embodied in digital script. Talk-like tweeting has the materiality of writing, but its written sign is deabstracted to gesture at oral meanings. The author is absent but the text is envoiced, animated like living language” (108). Over and over again we see Kress’ observation manifest; the act of production is interwoven into the consumption of meaning.

The final questions posed  in module four “The Educated Imagination in the Information Age: Redefining our Understandings of Literacy” are thought provoking. I believe that we have irrevocably entered the age of post text. Voice recognition and virtual assistants have even limited the necessity of a screen. According to comscore “50% of all searches will be voice searches by 2020” (Olson). The rise of voice to text technology does hint broadly at Ong’s secondary orality, voice as the primary experience, mediated by written text.  

In the New York Times article “Welcome to the Post text future” Farhad Manjoo discusses how “the defining narrative of our online moment concerns the decline of text, and the exploding reach and power of audio and video”. Audio and video communication dominance will alter too the way we think about the information presented, as the audio/visual form appeals to emotion far more than rational text. The reach and power of audio and video is evidenced in the the changing manner of our web consumption: it is predicted that by 2019, 80% of all internet traffic will come from video (World). But let’s get back to the odd twist that is Twitter. Wikström says it best: “the conventional nomenclature of designating the individual message in online writing as a post seems apt, as Twitter talk – a visual script of virtual speech – is inevitably post-writing”. The evolution of text technologies is once again in the spin cycle.

 

References

Bolter, David J. (2001). Writing Space: Computers, Hypertext, and the Remediation of Print

Kress, Gunther. Gains and Losses: New Forms of Texts, Knowledge, and Learning. vol. 22, , 2005, http://www.sciencedirect.com.

Manjoo, Farhad. “Welcome to the Post-Text Future.” The New York Times, The New York Times, 9 Feb. 2018, www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/02/09/technology/the-rise-of-a-visual-internet.html.

Olson, Christi. “Just Say It: The Future of Search Is Voice and Personal Digital Assistants.” Campaign: Marketing, Advertising and Media News & Analysis, www.campaignlive.co.uk/article/just-say-it-future-search-voice-personal-digital-assistants/1392459.

Ong, W. (2002). Orality and Literacy. London: Routledge.

Wikström, Peter. I Tweet like I Talk : Aspects of Speech and Writing on Twitter. 2017, http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kau:diva-64752.

World. “The State of Video Marketing in 2018 – #Infographic.” Digital Information World, 4 Mar. 2018, www.digitalinformationworld.com/2018/03/the-state-of-video-marketing-in-2018.html.

Postscript

This section of the blog post is composed through speech-to-text technology I am speaking my blog rather than writing it. I did not write the text prior to composing these voice thoughts, although I have edited the text in a traditional word processing format. I am interested in the difference between verbal speech and written text. We don’t generally write the way we speak, so therefore, if we are to fully utilize this voice-to-text technology, then we will have to also remediate the way we speak for the appropriate appearance and format of written text. I write better than I speak and I wonder if this is a mechanism of association, because I’ve always written my thoughts, or whether it is a natural tendency? The actual act of speaking what I want to be typed is more difficult, and less intuitive than I had thought it would be. It requires long pauses for me to collect my thoughts correctly. An interesting facet of speech-to-text technology and the remediation of print is that, whereas orality begins to end and is final, speech-to-text, secondary orality, is not, as the speech is recorded as text on an screen, and therefore remembered and recorded historically. (*italicized text represents the the edits)

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