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Challenges of multimedia self-presentation : taking, and mistaking, the show on the road

journal contribution
posted on 2008-10-01, 00:00 authored by Mark Nelson, G Hull, J Roche-Smith
One privilege enjoyed by new-media authors is the opportunity to realize representations of Self that are rich textual worlds in themselves and also to engage the wider world, with a voice, a smile, imagery, and sound. Still, closer investigation of multimedia composition practices reveals levels of complexity with which the verbal virtuoso is unconcerned. This article argues that while technology-afforded multimedia tools make it comparatively easy to author a vivid text, it is a multiplicatively more complicated matter to vividly realize and publicize an authorial intention. Based on analysis of the digital story creation process of a youth named “Steven,” the authors attempt to demonstrate the operation of two forces upon which the successful multimodal realization of the author's intention may hinge: “fixity” and “fluidity.” The authors show how, within the process of digital self-representation, these forces can intersect to influence multimodal meaning making, and an author's life, in consequential ways.

History

Journal

Written communication

Volume

25

Issue

4

Pagination

415 - 440

Publisher

Sage Publications, Inc.

Location

Thousand Oaks, Calif.

ISSN

0741-0883

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

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