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Janet H. Murray

Hamlet on the Holodeck

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Stories define how we think, the way we play, and the way we understand our lives. And just as Gutenberg made possible the stories that ushered in the Modem Era, so is the computer having a profound effect on the stories of the late 20th century. Today we are confronting the limits of books themselves — anticipating the end of storytelling as we know it — even as we witness the advent of a brave new world of cyberdramas. Computer technology of the late twentieth century is astonishing, thrilling, and strange, and no one is better qualified than Janet Murray to offer a breathtaking tour of how it is reshaping the stories we live by.
Can we imagine a world in which Homer's Iyre and Gutenberg's press have given way to virtual reality environments like the Star Trek® holodeck? Murray sees the harbingers of such a world in the fiction of Borges and Calvino, movies like Groundhog Day, and the videogames and Web sites of the 1990s. Where is our…
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Quotes

  • антонhas quoted4 years ago
    Most of all, the power to create objects procedurally (by specifying not just their appearance but their behavior) has led to an outpouring of whimsy and practical jokes: a plate of spaghetti “squirms uneasily” whenever someone says they are hungry; a bucket of water falls on people who try to enter a player’s room; magic spells turn fellow players into frogs or make them invisible to one another. MUDders relish one another’s ingenuity in stretching the representational powers of the environment. This constructivist pleasure is the highest form of narrative agency the medium allows, the ability to build things that display autonomous behavior
  • антонhas quoted4 years ago
    Of course, it is possible to play the game purely for the thrill of flying the Empire’s planes, but the moral impact of enacting an opposing role is a promising sign of the serious dramatic potential of the fighting game
  • антонhas quoted4 years ago
    Because guns and weaponlike interfaces offer such easy immersion and such a direct sense of agency and because violent aggression is so strong a part of human nature, shoot-’em-ups are here to stay. But that does not mean that simplistic violence is the limit of the form

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