Entries in writing (10)

Tuesday
May042010

From Japan to America: The Cross-cultural Journey of the 'Cell Phone Novel'

Image courtesy Flickr user kiwanja via CC.By Hazel Jennings

In December of 2008, Dana Goodyear wrote this story on a young woman from Japan that wrote a novel from her cell phone. Basically, the young married woman felt alone and depressed. So, she went to her mother's house for a few weeks, never left her room, and wrote the novel of her life by sending it in unedited snippets through text message. In case this hasn't occurred to you yet, publishing each micro-chapter instantly and completely eliminates any sort of revision. Imagine if you could not go back and edit any of your writing once you had written it. A character once introduced, could not be moved, changed, or altered. I immediately started thinking that I would write my whole story in one piece, in a word document. Edit and revise it to perfection. Then text it out once I knew it read exactly how I wanted it to read. But, I also allow my Crossword Puzzle iphone app to complete letters and even whole clues for me when I don't know the answer, and then still congratulate myself on my mastery of language when I complete the puzzle. In short, I'm a cheater.

Anyway, the young writer sent her text-message-chapters to a popular website in which other girls were doing the same thing, she formed a community in which many other young Japanese women were waiting for her tiny chapters to come one by one. These now called cell-phone novels are published in hardbacks and taking top ten literary spots in the Eastern world. Seriously.

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Friday
Apr022010

National Poetry Month: Some Thoughts and Resources to Make the Most of It

Image courtesy Flickr user Kivanc Nis via CCBy John Robert Ladd

We're a full day into National Poetry Month, the 30-day celebration of all things poetic that was started in 1996 by the American Academy of Poets. I have to admit that here at PT we have nothing in particular planned. That's not because we don't appreciate a month that celebrates poets and their work, we do. But poetry is what we do all year long, and it seems a little silly [and rather impossible] to emphasize it more than we normally would.

However, one of our main tasks is to bring you poetry resources from across the web, and during April there are even more sites, blogs, and tools than during any other time of year. Here are some great ones:

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Thursday
Apr012010

'A Real Inspiration to Continue Writing': On Blogging and Technology for Writers

As part of our ongoing guest series, we'd like to welcome blogger and essayist Lethe Bashar. Lethe is the founding editor of Escape Into Life, the online arts journal, and his own essays appear on The Blog of Innocence. He is also a prolific Twitter user, and you can find one of his many accounts here.

Every writer will approach blogging differently. For some writers, a blog is mainly a marketing apparatus to promote their published (or unpublished) books. Others treat a blog more like a daily journal, in which they record their development as a writer. And still others will transform their blog into a creative vehicle, often based on a theme or an idea, with lots of experimentation along the way. None of these are better or worse than the other, and there are quite a few I've left out, such as the collaborative blog, which is a kind of publishing outlet for a group of writers.

If I'd been born ten years earlier, I imagine I'd be submitting work to literary journals, and attempting to wedge myself into the cut-throat publishing industry. But the precise timing of my development as a writer coincided with the technology boom for online publishing. It was at this moment that I decided to eschew sending my work to journals and agents (as the publishing world was on its way down anyways), and throw myself into this new territory and see what would come of it.

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Wednesday
Feb172010

A Poetry Avatar: What Does Your Online Persona Say About Your Writing?

By Sarah-Hazel Jennings

 

Image courtesy Flickr user jared via a CC license.If you're a writer, I think it's safe to say that you're also self-indulgent, at least a little. I'm not trying to be self-deprecating or insulting. It's just that the majority of our writing is about ourselves: what's going on in our heads, what we want to happen, what we like, what we don't like, how we feel about what's going on around us. Either that, or we think our writing is pretty good and are pretty sure everyone would want to read, and so we've made the protagonist a thinly veiled version of ourselves [Don't act like you haven't done it!].

If you spend so much time writing from your own perspective, how do you get a fresh view?  In some way, every morning you wake up the exact same person.  Sure, your hair or sense of basic ethical grounding may have changed, but you're still you.  And, if you've ever had that wonderful experience of bringing a masterpiece of a poem to a work shop, waiting to hear the eruption of awed applause, and ending up with three pages of notes and one off-hand comment of, “Yeah... I think I liked it...,” you know that it's hard to judge yourself or your outlook objectively.

It's how we see ourselves that becomes important, and more and more the way we see ourselves is through our avatars: our online personas and the tiny pictures that encapsulate them. It's amazing how much that picture affects how others see us.  Don't take yourself so seriously and be honest: I wear long flowing dresses and flowers in my hair because, you know, I'm all earthy and stuff.  John Robert Ladd? He's got a sweater and English cabby hat thing going so you know he's scholarly.  My I-Can-Literally-Fix-Anything boyfriend doesn't really own anything without a paint stain or rip in the knee.  Whether these are our conscious decisions to create a persona or not is something I'll never know, but we do know that these decisions drastically effect how people think of us online.

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Thursday
Jan072010

Google Docs Can Revolutionize Your Poetic Lifestyle

Since I returned from my brief holiday hiatus, I put some thought into what would be the first post in Twenty Ten. I decided to go with a tool that's been around for a while, and one that has a great many applications outside of poetry. However its implications for creative work are what makes it particularly compelling to me.

Google Docs is a web-based document-processing product that's been around in some form since late 2006, but I'm routinely shocked by the number of people who've never heard of it or think it has no use to them. Docs is Google's ace in the whole when it comes to dealing with Microsoft's juggernaut Office product. And for those of you who regularly use Microsoft Office, Google Docs will look almost eerily familiar to you:


This image looks nearly identical to a Microsoft Word window, and the same goes for Google Spreadsheets and Presentations, which are basic analogs to Microsoft Excel and Powerpoint. Google does this because the interfaces Microsoft has created are so widely used that they are considered standard. It helps users like you and I to switch seamlessly between Word and Docs without really noticing the difference.

But if the products are so similar, what is the point in switching? That much is simple: Google Docs is entirely web-based. The image above appears as a tab within your normal browser window. The files created in Google Docs are saved to your Google account online, just like your e-mails.

The web-based approach to documents, as opposed to the traditional desktop-based Microsoft Office approach, allows for a flexibility in document creation that has never been seen before. At the surface, there's the general convenience of it: your documents are always online, accessible on any computer behind your secure Gmail password. This eliminates the need for the flash drives full of documents that college students and young professionals have held close to their chests for the past several years. This is the basic argument for cloud computing: that everything can be accessible from everywhere in a secure way.

However, the true usefulness of Google Docs goes beyond basic cloud accessibility. Google Docs allows users to share any document that you choose. You can allow anyone to see a shared document, even if they are not users of Google Docs. And you can even allow other users to edit those documents if you choose. This is where Docs burgeons into true usefulness for creative writers.

Think about collaboration with other writers using Microsoft Word. You create a document, and e-mail it as an attachment to another writer, who edits the document and returns it to you. Now you've got two versions of the same document on your computer: the original and the edited copy. You then make the changes to the original, including some more of your own changes. When you e-mail this version to the other writer, he or she now has two versions of the document on his or her computer. The cycle goes on this way, spawning more and more copies of the same document on both computers until the collaboration is done. And that's if only two collaborators are involved.

Google Docs allows a virtually infinite number of collaborators to edit the original document, eliminating the need to make any duplicates. This kind of seamless collaboration allows poets and writers to work together with an ease they've never had before. All the editors can enter the document as many times as they like, making as many changes as they need to until the document meets the needs of all involved. All e-mails and files sent back and forth are completely cut out of the equation.

What's shocking is that this technology has been around for about four years, and only a small portion of people are using it. In part I blame academic, editorial, and professional organizations, who require documents be submitted in Microsoft's proprietary '.doc' file format. It's been a daunting challenge to get around this requirement, but Google has developed a feature where, with one click, you can e-mail a Google Doc as a .doc attachment. The conversion is not perfect as far as formatting, but it's a quick and easy way to get around these ridiculous requirements.

There's so much useful technology out there, literally at our fingertips, and we're not using it for oftentimes petty reasons. Over the past couple years, Google Docs has changed how I deal with my daily professional and creative workflow. It's allowed a level of sharing and collaboration that has greatly simplified my poetic life, and I think it can do the same for you. All you've got to do is reach out and grab it.