TOO SOON: Burst Culture and Other Things…
Posted by: Christian Dumais in Movies, Too Soon
With the difficulty in modern literature finding an audience, it is no wonder that classic literature is having an even more difficult time connecting with readers. Results from marketing research performed by Orion Group publishing were “near-unanimous” in revealing that people thought classic literature to be “long, slow and repetitive” and “many respondents admitted to having an interest in the stories when they had come upon them in another way, like watching a TV adaptation or film that brought alive the story and characters.”
This lead to Orion to consider publishing condensed versions of classic literature:
The condensing of classic literature can be seen as a beginning. How long will it be until modern literature is viewed as being slow or repetitive? Already English teachers are using film at some point “as a replacement for a long text, or as a supplement to a written text or thematic unit.” How long before teachers exclusively use movies as an alternative experience of the text, especially when taking into account the finite amount of classes and the seemingly infinite amount of available material? How long before the idea of the text becomes just as important – if not more – as the text itself? (more…)
Tags: Alan Moore, Bad Signal, Burst Culture, Christian A. Dumais, Chuck Palahniuk, Crooked Little Vein, Everything Bad is Good for You, Fight Club, Google, Harry Potter, J.K. Rowling, J.R.R. Tolkien, print, Rant, Steven Johnson, The Lord of the Rings, Too Soon, Transmetropolitan, Warren Ellis, Zack Snyder




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