/page/2

let's try this

  • What fo you think?

mots





lettering found in paris the other weekend

archivisation

Bill Thompson mentions Songs of Im&Dig on his excellent blog today: http://www.thebillblog.com/billblog/index.php/2009/04/10/new-fun-and-new-names/

And..
Songs of Imagination and Digitisation has been nicely reviewed here by the Blake Archive.

Here’s the article:

if:book just published the long-anticipated Songs of Imagination and Digitisation, “an illuminated book for the digital age.” On the surface, this digital illuminated book looks (and functions) much like a book: it has covers, a (hyperlinked) table of contents, and turning pages.

picture-1This book, however, is also not a book. It does contain text (some of Blake’s short pieces, personal responses to Blake’s work, and new poems and prose by modern writers), but it also uses the book page to frame moving images. Video clips include readings of Blake by Toby Jones and interviews with Chris Meade (the director of if:book), Tim Heath (Chair of the Blake Society), writer Lisa Gee, new media writer Tim Wright, Emma Crewe (director of Child Hope), Sasha Hoare (film maker), and various members of the public. Pages of this digital illuminated book are also linked to other projects and videos — like Lisa Gee’s biography of Blake’s patron, William Hayley; Blake Walks; Blake’s Netbook; and Save the Tyger.

Several commentators mention Blake’s relationship to the new media of his day, and imagine his role within the context of digital media and the internet. Blake’s interest in new forms of media, and new forms of books, make him a perfect figure for this sort of thought-game. Pushing the page to include animated text and moving images naturally extends Blake’s experiments with text and image. The idea of expanding (exploding?) the book to include multimedia elements also reminds me of Zak Nelson’s design for a “new kind of book” (via Web Ink Now).

Nelson’s layout is in response to “a new kind of literacy,” that is, a digital literacy informed by reading websites:

newbooklmodel…people are becoming more literate in reading websites, and that neural reconfiguration may well be affecting how traditional books are read and sold (or, unsold as the case may be).

While it’s easy to imagine future books as digital extensions of the codex form, our new digital literacy might in fact more closely resemble ancient practices: reading scrolls. As Lev Manovich observes in The Language of New Media, “scrolling through the contents of a computer window or a World Wide Webpage has more in common with unrolling than it does with turning the pages of a modern book” (75). To me, one of the significant differences between the scrolling of online sources and the turning pages of the book form has to do with our relationship to information, how it is framed and how we can navigate it–whether we access frames of information sequentially, or whether we can scroll hastily to the end for a visual experience with information that is more “all at once.” While obviously bookish, Songs of Imagination and Digitisation does contain a scrolling page; readers’ comments answering the question “Where do you think Blake lives now?”

As a digital illuminated book, Songs of Imagination and Digitisation is an interesting hybrid of book and non-book. It holds on to the borders and sequential linearity of the book–each page contains a single object (either video clip or page of text), and you can only see one page (or set of facing pages) at a time. But it also spreads out into other sites, Blakean projects, and videos. It is is both familiar and strange, and I can’t wait to see what it does next.

rooms people feelings places


Kate Pullinger

I’m writing this live from the audience at The Readers Voice, a conference for book groups in Oxford where I’ve just been speaking about the e-future. Last night’s panel with Kate Pullinger and Brian Appleyard felt fulsome and stretching, though slightly intimidating to have Philip Pullman in the audience - I wonder what he made of it. According to Toni he kept shaking his head.



Back home now.

Talking about digital issues in relation to bookgroups highlights how they’ve transformed reading into a time-specific, transliterate, shared experience for many people. Our plans to produce a different kind of reading experience should work well in that setting, though there will be resistence I’m sure to digital literature.

Attending an inspirational poetry workshop with Casi Dylan of the Reader Organisation which runs reading out loud sessions with all kinds of groups, I was struck by how liberating it is to be gathered together with others for unusual reasons.

Our if so flo seminar for on May 1st is now fully booked but we’re planning more if:book salons soon, including a day long event ‘round our house’ and featuring Cindy Oswin’s amazing Salon with Getrude Stein. Watch this space for details.

Finally, I must mention an amazing, moving and unconnected coincidence: sitting down for breakfast at Jesus College where the event was held, I started talking to a man beside me who looked vaguely familiar. When he mentioned having been a GP in Sheffield I recognised him: “You’re the man who saved my son’s life twenty four years ago.” It was Doctor Greaves who rushed Joe to hospital with us when we found our six month old baby collapsed in his cot one morning. It was a pleasure to be able to thank him again after all this time.

O, Albion

WIRED up


I thought I’d bump into lots of people I knew at the launch party of WIRED UK at Skylon at the South Bank Centre last night, but no. This throng was from a different set of strands of the interweb from where all those people who seem to be at ‘everything’ seem to be. I saw a Hon brother or two in the distance, but theirs were the only familiar faces. I met a friendly popular science writer called John Emsley who spotted me looking as lost as he, and someone very big in fragrances, then played with a gizmo like a giant iTouch screen supplied by a company called Volume, picked up my cool black goody bag and headed home to find that if:book’s Songs of Imagination & Digitisation, launched tomorrow, is featured on page 92 of the first issue - listed as one of 10 cultural bites for May:

“In another world, William Blake could well have been a blogger. Taking its cue from his innate distrust of systems and their limitations, the literary think-tank if:book is exploding the confines of print to create a ‘netbook’ based around the works of the poet.. the project aims to emulate Blake’s own profound spirit of innovation.”



…Meanwhile Lisa Gee has just found this plug for us in the Wall Street Journal’s online guide to 2009.

if:book goes to Oxford

The Book is Dead: Long Live the Book

Friday, 3rd APRIL

Chris Meade, Kate Pullinger and Bryan Appleyard
6pm McKenna Room, Christ Church £7.00

Is literature as we know it really moving from printed page to networked screen – or is this just hype? Our panel will examine the impact of the internet (the ‘read/write web’), and other new media on the book. It will debate whether fiction is becoming interactive, collaborative and non-linear, and how new technologies such as e-readers and print-on-demand machines are changing the way we read, write and consume literature. Panellists include Sunday Times’ critic Brian Appleyard, Chris Meade, former director of the Book Trust, now director of If:Book, a ‘think and do tank’ exploring the impact of new media on reading and writing, and writer Kate Pullinger, whose novels include A Little Stranger and www.inanimatealice.com, a multimedia graphic novel in episodes. Chaired by Lucy Atkins.

AND on SATURDAY 4TH APRIL, JESUS COLLEGE OXFORD, Chris is speaking at
THE READERS VOICE - A CONFERENCE FOR READING GROUPS

http://thereadersvoice.googlepages.com/home

Strategies for digital publishing in a time of uncertainty

Chris is one of the speakers at this day-long seminar, part of the London Bookfair.

Date/Time: 19 Apr 2009
13:00-18:00
Location: Earls Court One, Level 1, Cromwell Room
To book a place CLICK HERE

For American book publishers these are challenging times. The economic downturn is hitting hard an industry once thought by many to be recession-proof. Bookstores are reporting sharp declines in sales and traditional channels for books are shrinking and consolidating. Consumer confidence is low, reading skills and literacy levels are falling, and readers have more competing distractions than ever before.

*
While they confront today some of the toughest trading conditions they have ever known, American publishers have not forgotten tomorrow. Many are actively investing for the future with innovative and experimental programs focused on building tomorrow’s book industry. Central to these innovations is an understanding that America’s readers are changing and that a generation of consumers is emerging with radically different expectations about how content should be published, consumed, priced, and protected.

Program

13.00 Welcome coffee
* 13.30 Introduction and Welcome
Michael Healy – Executive Director, Book Industry Study Group
* 14.30-15.30 Setting the context: Understanding the market and consumer

Understanding tomorrow’s digital consumer by knowing what they are up to today
Kelly Gallagher – Vice President, Publisher Services, R.R. Bowker.
* The American market for e-books today
Michael Smith – Executive Director, International Digital Publishing Forum
* Publishing strategies for the changing consumer
Chris Meade- CEO, if:book London on Imagination & Digitisation

15.30-15.45 Coffee break

15.45-16.45 Publishing strategies for the changing consumer

Academe 2.0: Responding to changes in student and professor expectations
Ken Brooks -Senior Vice President, Global Production Services, Cengage Learning
* The future of trade publishing in a digital marketplace
Mike Shatzkin – CEO, The Idea Logical Company

16.45-18.00 New Services and experiences for the changing reader
* It’s not about the technology; it’s about the reader – creating an immersive reading experience that rivals the book.
Neelan Choksi – Chief Operating Officer, Lexcycle/Stanza
* Books and busy lives – adapting to changes in reading habits
Susan Danziger – Chief Executive Officer, DailyLit
* Understanding the Google book settlement: what will it really mean for the market?
Jan Constantine - General Counsel, The Author’s Guild
* Creating the conditions for success: how standards are helping the digital market
Michael Smith – Executive Director, International Digital Publishing Forum
Michael Healy – Executive Director, Book Industry Study Group

Panel discussion - Q& A session

18.00 End of the conference

reading in colour 2

The colour e-book has arrived already - and I read somewhere it would take ten years to develop. It’s pricey and not available here yet but… this is the thing that makes the screen better than paper for reading books on. Oo-er!

let's try this

  • What fo you think?

mots





lettering found in paris the other weekend

archivisation

Bill Thompson mentions Songs of Im&Dig on his excellent blog today: http://www.thebillblog.com/billblog/index.php/2009/04/10/new-fun-and-new-names/

And..
Songs of Imagination and Digitisation has been nicely reviewed here by the Blake Archive.

Here’s the article:

if:book just published the long-anticipated Songs of Imagination and Digitisation, “an illuminated book for the digital age.” On the surface, this digital illuminated book looks (and functions) much like a book: it has covers, a (hyperlinked) table of contents, and turning pages.

picture-1This book, however, is also not a book. It does contain text (some of Blake’s short pieces, personal responses to Blake’s work, and new poems and prose by modern writers), but it also uses the book page to frame moving images. Video clips include readings of Blake by Toby Jones and interviews with Chris Meade (the director of if:book), Tim Heath (Chair of the Blake Society), writer Lisa Gee, new media writer Tim Wright, Emma Crewe (director of Child Hope), Sasha Hoare (film maker), and various members of the public. Pages of this digital illuminated book are also linked to other projects and videos — like Lisa Gee’s biography of Blake’s patron, William Hayley; Blake Walks; Blake’s Netbook; and Save the Tyger.

Several commentators mention Blake’s relationship to the new media of his day, and imagine his role within the context of digital media and the internet. Blake’s interest in new forms of media, and new forms of books, make him a perfect figure for this sort of thought-game. Pushing the page to include animated text and moving images naturally extends Blake’s experiments with text and image. The idea of expanding (exploding?) the book to include multimedia elements also reminds me of Zak Nelson’s design for a “new kind of book” (via Web Ink Now).

Nelson’s layout is in response to “a new kind of literacy,” that is, a digital literacy informed by reading websites:

newbooklmodel…people are becoming more literate in reading websites, and that neural reconfiguration may well be affecting how traditional books are read and sold (or, unsold as the case may be).

While it’s easy to imagine future books as digital extensions of the codex form, our new digital literacy might in fact more closely resemble ancient practices: reading scrolls. As Lev Manovich observes in The Language of New Media, “scrolling through the contents of a computer window or a World Wide Webpage has more in common with unrolling than it does with turning the pages of a modern book” (75). To me, one of the significant differences between the scrolling of online sources and the turning pages of the book form has to do with our relationship to information, how it is framed and how we can navigate it–whether we access frames of information sequentially, or whether we can scroll hastily to the end for a visual experience with information that is more “all at once.” While obviously bookish, Songs of Imagination and Digitisation does contain a scrolling page; readers’ comments answering the question “Where do you think Blake lives now?”

As a digital illuminated book, Songs of Imagination and Digitisation is an interesting hybrid of book and non-book. It holds on to the borders and sequential linearity of the book–each page contains a single object (either video clip or page of text), and you can only see one page (or set of facing pages) at a time. But it also spreads out into other sites, Blakean projects, and videos. It is is both familiar and strange, and I can’t wait to see what it does next.

rooms people feelings places


Kate Pullinger

I’m writing this live from the audience at The Readers Voice, a conference for book groups in Oxford where I’ve just been speaking about the e-future. Last night’s panel with Kate Pullinger and Brian Appleyard felt fulsome and stretching, though slightly intimidating to have Philip Pullman in the audience - I wonder what he made of it. According to Toni he kept shaking his head.



Back home now.

Talking about digital issues in relation to bookgroups highlights how they’ve transformed reading into a time-specific, transliterate, shared experience for many people. Our plans to produce a different kind of reading experience should work well in that setting, though there will be resistence I’m sure to digital literature.

Attending an inspirational poetry workshop with Casi Dylan of the Reader Organisation which runs reading out loud sessions with all kinds of groups, I was struck by how liberating it is to be gathered together with others for unusual reasons.

Our if so flo seminar for on May 1st is now fully booked but we’re planning more if:book salons soon, including a day long event ‘round our house’ and featuring Cindy Oswin’s amazing Salon with Getrude Stein. Watch this space for details.

Finally, I must mention an amazing, moving and unconnected coincidence: sitting down for breakfast at Jesus College where the event was held, I started talking to a man beside me who looked vaguely familiar. When he mentioned having been a GP in Sheffield I recognised him: “You’re the man who saved my son’s life twenty four years ago.” It was Doctor Greaves who rushed Joe to hospital with us when we found our six month old baby collapsed in his cot one morning. It was a pleasure to be able to thank him again after all this time.

O, Albion

WIRED up


I thought I’d bump into lots of people I knew at the launch party of WIRED UK at Skylon at the South Bank Centre last night, but no. This throng was from a different set of strands of the interweb from where all those people who seem to be at ‘everything’ seem to be. I saw a Hon brother or two in the distance, but theirs were the only familiar faces. I met a friendly popular science writer called John Emsley who spotted me looking as lost as he, and someone very big in fragrances, then played with a gizmo like a giant iTouch screen supplied by a company called Volume, picked up my cool black goody bag and headed home to find that if:book’s Songs of Imagination & Digitisation, launched tomorrow, is featured on page 92 of the first issue - listed as one of 10 cultural bites for May:

“In another world, William Blake could well have been a blogger. Taking its cue from his innate distrust of systems and their limitations, the literary think-tank if:book is exploding the confines of print to create a ‘netbook’ based around the works of the poet.. the project aims to emulate Blake’s own profound spirit of innovation.”



…Meanwhile Lisa Gee has just found this plug for us in the Wall Street Journal’s online guide to 2009.

if:book goes to Oxford

The Book is Dead: Long Live the Book

Friday, 3rd APRIL

Chris Meade, Kate Pullinger and Bryan Appleyard
6pm McKenna Room, Christ Church £7.00

Is literature as we know it really moving from printed page to networked screen – or is this just hype? Our panel will examine the impact of the internet (the ‘read/write web’), and other new media on the book. It will debate whether fiction is becoming interactive, collaborative and non-linear, and how new technologies such as e-readers and print-on-demand machines are changing the way we read, write and consume literature. Panellists include Sunday Times’ critic Brian Appleyard, Chris Meade, former director of the Book Trust, now director of If:Book, a ‘think and do tank’ exploring the impact of new media on reading and writing, and writer Kate Pullinger, whose novels include A Little Stranger and www.inanimatealice.com, a multimedia graphic novel in episodes. Chaired by Lucy Atkins.

AND on SATURDAY 4TH APRIL, JESUS COLLEGE OXFORD, Chris is speaking at
THE READERS VOICE - A CONFERENCE FOR READING GROUPS

http://thereadersvoice.googlepages.com/home

Strategies for digital publishing in a time of uncertainty

Chris is one of the speakers at this day-long seminar, part of the London Bookfair.

Date/Time: 19 Apr 2009
13:00-18:00
Location: Earls Court One, Level 1, Cromwell Room
To book a place CLICK HERE

For American book publishers these are challenging times. The economic downturn is hitting hard an industry once thought by many to be recession-proof. Bookstores are reporting sharp declines in sales and traditional channels for books are shrinking and consolidating. Consumer confidence is low, reading skills and literacy levels are falling, and readers have more competing distractions than ever before.

*
While they confront today some of the toughest trading conditions they have ever known, American publishers have not forgotten tomorrow. Many are actively investing for the future with innovative and experimental programs focused on building tomorrow’s book industry. Central to these innovations is an understanding that America’s readers are changing and that a generation of consumers is emerging with radically different expectations about how content should be published, consumed, priced, and protected.

Program

13.00 Welcome coffee
* 13.30 Introduction and Welcome
Michael Healy – Executive Director, Book Industry Study Group
* 14.30-15.30 Setting the context: Understanding the market and consumer

Understanding tomorrow’s digital consumer by knowing what they are up to today
Kelly Gallagher – Vice President, Publisher Services, R.R. Bowker.
* The American market for e-books today
Michael Smith – Executive Director, International Digital Publishing Forum
* Publishing strategies for the changing consumer
Chris Meade- CEO, if:book London on Imagination & Digitisation

15.30-15.45 Coffee break

15.45-16.45 Publishing strategies for the changing consumer

Academe 2.0: Responding to changes in student and professor expectations
Ken Brooks -Senior Vice President, Global Production Services, Cengage Learning
* The future of trade publishing in a digital marketplace
Mike Shatzkin – CEO, The Idea Logical Company

16.45-18.00 New Services and experiences for the changing reader
* It’s not about the technology; it’s about the reader – creating an immersive reading experience that rivals the book.
Neelan Choksi – Chief Operating Officer, Lexcycle/Stanza
* Books and busy lives – adapting to changes in reading habits
Susan Danziger – Chief Executive Officer, DailyLit
* Understanding the Google book settlement: what will it really mean for the market?
Jan Constantine - General Counsel, The Author’s Guild
* Creating the conditions for success: how standards are helping the digital market
Michael Smith – Executive Director, International Digital Publishing Forum
Michael Healy – Executive Director, Book Industry Study Group

Panel discussion - Q& A session

18.00 End of the conference

reading in colour 2

The colour e-book has arrived already - and I read somewhere it would take ten years to develop. It’s pricey and not available here yet but… this is the thing that makes the screen better than paper for reading books on. Oo-er!

let's try this
mots
archivisation
rooms people feelings places
O, Albion
WIRED up
if:book goes to Oxford
Strategies for digital publishing in a time of uncertainty
reading in colour 2

About:

blog of Chris Meade, Director of if:book,
a think and do tank
exploring the potential of new media
for creative reading and writing

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