new media writing

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A prize initiated in 2010 at Bournemouth University for new media writing, sponsored by Bournemouth University, IF Book, Arts Bournemouth, and Dreaming Methods.

The prize highlights inspiring work, raises awareness and provokes discussion about new media writing, the future of the 'written' word and storytelling.

  • The Main prize was awarded to Dan Hett for his work c ya laterrrr
  • The Writing Magazine Digital Journalism Award 2020 was awarded to Eman Mounir for her work Black Beaches
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The subcategory of the 2016 New Media Writing Prize for the Student Prize Winner and Shortlist.

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United Kingdom

Short description

A prize initiated in 2010 at Bournemouth University for new media writing, sponsored by Bournemouth University, IF Book, Arts Bournemouth, and Dreaming Methods.

The prize highlights inspiring work, raises awareness and provokes discussion about new media writing, the future of the 'written' word and storytelling.

  • The Main prize was awarded to J.R. Carpenter for her work The Gathering Cloud
  • The Student prize was awarded to Jamie Paddock for his work The Dying Mind
  • The Gorkana Award for Journalism was awarded to Berta Tilmantaite (Best International) for her work on Will to Win and to Carla Pedret (Best UK-focused) for her work on The Exodus Data Project.
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Bournemouth University
Bournemouth
United Kingdom

Short description

The New Media Writing Prize awards evening took place at Bournemouth University on January 17th 2018. Vanita Patel, BA English Student at Bournemouth University, captured the event for us.On January 17th, Bournemouth University hosted the 8th annual awards ceremony for the New Media Writing Prize. This year’s attendees were lucky to have the opportunity to listen to Adrian Smith, Amuzo Director and one of the creators of the original Tomb Raider games. The evening also consisted of a presentation with the competition’s shortlisted entries and winners as well as giving an insight on some of the judges own personal opinions on what new media narratives meant to them. The event was organised by Jim Pope and was graciously sponsored by if:book boss, Chris Meade, Unicorn Training CEO Peter Phillips and Gorkana’s Philip Smith and Cheryl Douglas.

Adrian Smith talked about his experience with interactive narratives whilst creating Tomb Raider in 1996. Using the New Media Writing Prize’s key elements: Innovation, Interactive and Immersive as a starting point for his presentation, Smith gave an interesting talk about the creation of the iconic gaming franchise. It was clear that during the creation of Tomb Raider, the most important element of it was what the heart of the game should be. Whether it was being able to let the player explore the world, making the game accessible to all, or to produce achievable goals and challenges, Tomb Raider provides many options for whatever type of gamer you are.

(Source: Article from www.theliteraryplatform.com :  ‘The Cartographer’s Confession’ wins the New Media Writing Prize 2017, http://theliteraryplatform.com/magazine/2018/01/cartographers-confessio…  )

Bournemouth University and if: book UK announced the shortlist for the 2017 New Media Writing Prize. The shortlisted works for 2017 were:

Main Prize Winner and Shortlist 2017:

The Main Prize was awarded to James Attlee: The Cartographer’s Confession 

The Student prize was awarded to Natasha Nunn: Mary Rose http://mary-rose.ca 

Gorkana Award for Journalism 2017 awarded to Magdelena Chodownik, Akradiusz Sotdon, and Piotr Kliks: Lunik IX https://outride.rs/en/?p=31579 

Lunik IX awarded to Magdelena Chodownik, Akradiusz Sotdon, and Piotr Kliks: http://outride.rs/en/lunik-ix/

(Source: New Media Prize 2017)

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New Media Writing Prize 2017
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By Daniele Giampà, 10 April, 2015
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Abstract (in English)

Alan Bigelow tells in this interview how he started publishing online works of digital poetry around the year 1999 and where his inspirations for his work come from. Furthermore he explains why he chose to change from working with Flash to working with HTML5 and in which way this decision subsequently changed his way of writing. Then he considers the transition from printed books to digital literature from the point of view of the reader also in regards of the aesthetics of digital born literature. In the end he gives his opinion about the status of electronic literature in the academic field.

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Bournemouth University and if:book UK announced the shortlist for the 2014 New Media Writing Prize. The shortlisted works for 2014 were:

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By Scott Rettberg, 9 January, 2013
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Fugues, a project of the NT2 Laboratory at the Université du Québec à Montréal, is both an hypermedia adaptation of the poem Piano published 2001 by Quebec author René Lapierre and a literary critical analysis of that same poem. The Fugues Project originally came about when Bertrand Gervais asked NT2 Lab students to think about how to read and to analyze a paper-published poem through hypermedia. Instead of writing a dissertation as one usually does when reading a text in a literature classroom, participants were asked to adapt Piano through hypermedia. The goal was to think about new ways of reading printed text using electronic tools. The participants came up with an associative way of exploring this particular poem. This experimental project was designed not only to build an audience for new media literary works and writing by just presenting existing hypermedia works, but also to ask these literary scholars to think how they would go about writing a paper about a poem in a non-textbook manner. The idea behind this was to put theory into practice. Or rather: to create a hypermedia work allows for a literary audience not only to read new media literary works but it also allows practices in writing new media and thus, familiarizing the literature class to hypermedia and how students can now add associative audio, video and graphics interpretations to their written text-analysis.

(Source: Author's abstract, 2008 ELO Conference)

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Bournemouth University and if:book UK announced the shortlist for the 2012 New Media Writing Prize. The shortlisted works for 2012 were:

Kristi Barnet: Hurst (aka @Karen Barley) http://www.karenbarley.co.uk/JR Carpenter: Cityfish http://luckysoap.com/cityfish/Jerome Fletcher: Pentimento http://air.falmouth.ac.uk/digitallit/pentimentoDaniel M Goodbrey: A Duck Has an Adventure http://emerl.com/stuff/duck.htmlMark C Marino: Living Will http://markcmarino.com/tales/livingwill.htmlKatherine Norman: Window http://www.novamara.com/windowStevan Zivadinovic: Hobo Lobo of Hamelin http://hobolobo.net/

The winner "Window" by Katherine Norman was announced at the Prize ceremony on Wednesday the 28th of November at Bournemouth University. The 2012 competition was judged by Sarah Butler, Lisa Gee, Sam Missingham and Louise Rice.

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