V-R-erses An XR Story Series

From HandWiki
Short description: Microstory series using 3D rendered forms


Note that actual title is “V[R]erses”: An XR Story Series.

The V[R]erses is a microstory series using 3D rendered forms that can be used over multiple computers and platforms using a VP App,[1][2]

Reading modalities

Each 3d rotating form has text nodes to click to open, and a sound loop in the background. The nodes are numbered numerically for a default path order, which appears.[3] Users can select the texts in different orders. [4]

History

This started this series in 2019. Mez Breeze started this series, where each story's text is created by a different digital literature author with Mez Breeze providing the development, design, model, and audio.[5] Many electronic literature writers have contributed to this series, including Mark Marino, Davin Heckman, Scott Rettberg, Annie Abrahams, Jeremy Hight, Andrea Phillips, David Thomas Henry Wright, Michael Maguire, Auriea Harvey, Mez Breeze, Rhea Myers and Chriss Kerr[6] While each work functions in the same manner, each differs widely in aesthetics and content.[7] David Thomas Henry Wright recounts that while he wrote the text, Mez created the images and the work itself, and therefore the text author should not be regarded as the creator of the piece.[5]

Publications

The series is published in The New River Journal of Electronic Literature and Digital Art[8] and featured in Con-ceptuali isms, the anthology of prose, poetry, visual found and hybrid writing as contemporary art,[9] ABC: avantgarde boot camp,[10] and the Electronic Literature Organization's 2021 exhibit.

Reception

Steve Tomusula notes that The V[R]erses are an example of technology uses that are revolutionizing literature.[11] Marc Garrett recommends The V[R]erses as an example of literature "straddling the fields of art, technology, and social change."[12]

References

  1. "Mo[XRphing B[l]ends: The State of XR [Literature] | by Mez Breeze"] (in en). http://thedigitalreview.com/issue01/breeze_morphing_blends/index.html. 
  2. "An Interview With: Mez Breeze". https://thewritingplatform.com/2020/01/an-interview-with-mez-breeze/. 
  3. "Art, Academics, and Beyond at the Electronic Literature Organization Conference and Festival: Platform (Post?) Pandemic" (in en). https://www.uib.no/en/rg/electronicliterature/145240/art-academics-and-beyond-electronic-literature-organization. 
  4. Neural (2020-07-06). "The V[Rerses, virtual objects of literature | Neural"] (in en-US). https://neural.it/2020/07/the-vrerses-virtual-objects-of-literature/. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 Wright, David Thomas Henry (2020-10-29). "Collaboration and authority in electronic literature" (in en). TEXT 24 (Special 59): 1–12. doi:10.52086/001c.23486. https://textjournal.scholasticahq.com/article/23486-collaboration-and-authority-in-electronic-literature. 
  6. "V[Rerse 10: Artemisianum"] (in en). 2024-09-30. https://breathlibrary.org/vrerse-10-artemisianum/. 
  7. "Biblumliteraria". https://biblumliteraria.blogspot.com/2020/01/. 
  8. "“V[Rerses”: An XR Story Series – The New River"] (in en-US). https://thenewriverjournal.org/vrerses-an-xr-story-series/. 
  9. "Online Works" (in en). https://www.conceptualisms.info/online-works. 
  10. "ABC – avantgarde-boot-camp". https://avantgarde-boot-camp.org/. 
  11. Tomasula, Steve, ed (2022). Conceptualisms: the anthology of prose, poetry, visual, found, e- & hybrid writing as contemporary art. Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press. ISBN 978-0-8173-6041-2. 
  12. "FurtherList No.16 January 3rd 2020". 2020-01-02. https://www.furtherfield.org/furtherlist-no-16-january-3rd-2020/. 

“V[R]erses”: An XR Story Series[1]