Story Circle
Description
“Where once cultures valued storytellers for lauding, lamenting, and laughing at those in power, this thoughtful book illuminates the hopes, practices and achievements of the myriad amateur storytellers who populate today’s globalized and digitalized cultures.” Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science
“I warmly welcome the publication of Story Circle. It provides a fascinating account of what’s happened in digital storytelling so far and will be a crucial reference point for digital storytelling in the future.” Menna Richards, Controller, BBC Wales List of Figures
List of Tables
Acknowledgments
Notes on Contributors
Part I: What is Digital Storytelling?
1. Computational Power Meets Human Contact: John Hartley (Queensland University of Technology) and Kelly McWilliam (Queensland University of Technology)
2. TV Stories: From Representation to Productivity: John Hartley (Queensland University of Technology)
3. The Global Diffusion of a Community Media Practice: Digital Storytelling Online: Kelly McWilliam (Queensland University of Technology)
Part II: Foundational Practices
4. Where It All Started: The Center for Digital Storytelling in California: Joe Lambert (Center for Digital Storytelling, Berkeley, California)
5. "Capture Wales": The BBC Digital Storytelling Project: Daniel Meadows (University of Cardiff) and Jenny Kidd (University of Manchester)
6. Digital Storytelling at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image: Helen Simondson (Australian Centre for the Moving Image)
7. Radio Storytelling and Beyond: Marie Crook (freelance consultant))
Part III: Digital Storytelling Around the World
8. Narrating Euro-African Life in Digital Space: Sissy Helff (University of Frankfurt) and Julie Woletz (University of Frankfurt)
9. Developing Digital Storytelling in Brazil: Margaret Anne Clarke (University of Porstmouth)
10. Digital Storytelling as Participatory Public History in Australia: Jean Burgess (Queensland University of Technology) and Helen Klaebe (Queensland University of Technology)
11. Finding a Voice: Participatory Development in Southeast Asia: Jo Tacchi (Queensland University of Technology)
12. The Matrices of Digital Storytelling: Examples from Scandinavia: Knut Lundby (University of Oslo)
13. Digital Storytelling in Belgium: Power and Participation: Nico Carpentier (Free University of Brussels and Catholic University of Brussels)
14. Exploring Self-representations in Wales and London: Tension in the Text: Nancy Thumim (London School of Economics and Political Science)
Part IV: Emergent Practices
15. Digital Storytelling as Play: The Tale of Tales: Maria Chatzichristodoulou (University of London)
16. Commercialization and Digital Storytelling in China: Wu Qiongli (company director)
17. Digital Storytelling with Youth: Whose Agenda Is It?: Lora Taub-Pervizpour (Muhlenberg College)
18. Digital Storytelling in Education: An Emerging Institutional Technology?: Patrick Lowenthal (Regis University)
19. Digital Storytelling in Organizations: Syntax and Skills: Lisa Dush (Massachusetts University of Technology)
20. Beyond Individual Expression: Working with Cultural Institutions: Jerry Watkins (Swinburne University of Technology) and Angelina Russo (Swinburne University of Technology)
References
Index
"There can be no doubt that this book is important in fostering understanding of DST's potential and it deserves many readers among students, researchers and practitioners." (Seminar.net, July 2010)“Where once cultures valued storytellers for lauding, lamenting, and laughing at those in power, this thoughtful book illuminates the hopes, practices and achievements of the myriad amateur storytellers who populate today’s globalized and digitalized cultures.” Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science
“I warmly welcome the publication of Story Circle. It provides a fascinating account of what’s happened in digital storytelling so far and will be a crucial reference point for digital storytelling in the future.” Menna Richards, Controller, BBC Wales "Where once cultures valued storytellers for lauding, lamenting and laughing at those in power, this thoughtful book illuminates the hopes, practices and achievements of the myriad amateur storytellers who populate today's globalised and digitalized cultures." Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science
“I warmly welcome the publication of Story Circle. It provides a fascinating account of what's happened in digital storytelling so far and will be a crucial reference point for digital storytelling in the future.” Menna Richards Controller BBC Wales
PUBLISHER:
Wiley
ISBN-13:
9781405180580
BINDING:
Paperback
BISAC:
Social Science
BOOK DIMENSIONS:
Dimensions: 144.80(W) x Dimensions: 223.50(H) x Dimensions: 20.30(D)
AUDIENCE TYPE:
General/Adult
LANGUAGE:
English