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?
Whether it is the weekly scanning of new comic books for torrent users to download or the re-typing of long novels into unformatted text files or Google scanning and digitizing millions of books from various libraries globally for electronic use, as more and more printed texts become digitalized, text becomes more of an abstraction, evolving something that is barely tangible except for its ability to be held in your hand on paper into something even more intangible. Andrew Herkovic – a Stanford librarian working with Google – considers the aforementioned project to be “one of the great milestones in the shift of our culture from paper-based to electronic.”
With this kind of initiative, it is easy to imagine a generation who will not view J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series as seven books or thousands of pages worth of story, but 10MB worth of data.
It is no longer about reading print, instead it is about reading with the option to print.
But notice the common verb: reading. Even as the line between print and digitized text blurs, and despite what publishers would have you believe, people are still reading. Readers have simply relocated for more exceptional and less time consuming experiences. Or as Steven Johnson explains in his book Everything Bad is Good For You: How Today’s Popular Culture is Actually Making us Smarter:
Johnson continues by adding, “…yes, we’re spending less time reading literary fiction, but that’s because we’re spending less time doing everything we used to do before,” and thus, bringing us right back to that pesky issue with time.
One can choose a week or more to read through J. R. R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings books or spend roughly 10 hours watching the movies. This is an example of narrative compression – providing a satisfying narrative experience within the shortest period of time possible without sacrificing any of its complexity. Considering the daunting nature of Tolkien’s books, as well as the amount of time needed to read them, it is no wonder many people find more satisfaction in watching the movies. The same can be said for those who download the individual songs they enjoy rather than the complete albums they do not, or those who TiVo their “live” television programs to fast-forward through the commercials, or who read spoilers of their favorite movies to determine whether they will watch the movie or not.
All of the aforementioned examples are symptoms of what Warren Ellis, author of Transmetropolitan and Crooked Little Vein, calls “burst culture”. On his subscription email service Bad Signal, Ellis wrote about the variances in print and web texts – seeing them not as a blurring of mediums but as a schism:
The idea of a burst culture can be both fascinating and frightening depending on which medium you prefer to read from. Writers like Chuck Palahniuk, author of such books as Fight Club and Rant: An Oral Biography of Buster Casey, have been aware of such a culture for quite some time:
However, it will take more than an abundance of verbs to get the burst culture picking up books, as writers like Alan Moore, author of the genre defining graphic novel Watchmen, who understood as far back as 1985 that comic books had to provide an experience that could not be obtained in film:
Ironically, Moore’s Watchmen is currently being turned into a Warner Brothers film by director Zack Snyder for a 2009 release, and one of the most consistent vocal concerns from fans has been just how many changes will be made as they want the experience of reading the book to be translated onscreen as exact as possible.
This is TOO SOON.
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







Entries (RSS)
August 19th, 2008 at 10:43 pm
I remember seeing a play, a few years ago, where someone mentioned a book, and the other characters’ lines in response went something like this.
Char 1: “I’ll wait for the movie.”
Char 2: “I’ll wait for the t-shirt”
Char 3: “I’m waiting for the coffee mug.”
We do tend to want to shorten things, simplify, make it quicker to ‘get’ and that’s a sad trend, really.
Great post as always.
I gave your blog a special mention/award in my latest post. There is no need for you to reciprocate or participate in any way, but I wanted to let you and a few others know I appreciate the material you share here.
August 20th, 2008 at 10:22 am
I’m glad you enjoyed the post, Margaret. It is a sad trend, but an interesting one nonetheless. I’ll probably write more on this later because it’s pretty amazing how this attitude is changing pop culture.
I can’t speak for Matt - this is his BBQ; I’m the guy who showed up late with a pack of beer - but thanks for the special mention. It’s a nice surprise, and certainly an honor. Thanks again.
August 23rd, 2008 at 10:19 am
Literature is long? Old Man and the Sea is a short book. So is Dr. Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde. Grapes of Wrath is long but it moves along at a very brisk clip, and the Great Gatsby is shorter than many Dainelle Steele Novels.
What, if it’s longer than a graphic novel it’s too long?
Sheesh
August 23rd, 2008 at 7:09 pm
I don’t think literature is too long. I think what it comes down to is that people these days don’t have a lot of time to do everything they want. They see a popular book that will take them a day or more to read all the way through and then they see the two hour adaptation on DVD, and they make the choice to watch the movie instead.
It’s a matter of compression, how short can we make the narrative without sacrificing the overall experience.
To someone like me (and probably you, from what you wrote), nothing can replace the book itself. But to someone raised with an iPod and an internet connection, well, sadly that book seems pretty cumbersome by comparison.