POIESIS AND TECHNOLOGIES
e-Learning Material Development in Literature
Laura Borràs and Joan Elies Adell
Internet Interdisciplinary Institute, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Av. Tibidabo 39-43, Barcelona, Spain
Keywords: e-Learning, material development, literary studies, digital literature.
Abstract: We wanted our students to act as literary critics of works of digital literature so we designed a work of
digital literature with different surfing possibilities so that students could undertake an authentic and
complete exercise of literary criticism. This piece of Digital Literature (the Diary of an Absence) is an e-
learning tool to show them what a piece of digital narrative could be and to provide them the real and
complex experience of reading the new literature in its own medium and with its own rules. With different
technologies such as Director, Flash, Quick-time, HTML, etc. the Diary is an eminently textual product,
situated in a determinate visual and musical dimension, which also offers the reader a journey to be
undertaken. It presents six possible approaches to the text and therefore six different possible readings: 1-
An exploratory immersion in the house-scenario that offers words acting as passwords and points of access
to the text. 2- A nominal reading that comes from the universe of words that have been selected from the
text. 3- A numerical reading by looking at the ‘treasure map’ of the numbers allowing a chronological
reading of the diary pages. 4- A topological reading allows consulting the plan of the house and its
surroundings to see which objects or locations give us an access to the text and where it is situated. 5- A
reading through objects permits to reach the text from the different objects in which the words have been
assigned and 6- A musical reading since the map situates the different lyrics that constitute this particular
melody in space. In a word: an immersive experience to approach e-literature from e-learning.
1 MANAGING EDUCATION IN
THE DIGITAL AGE
The introduction of digital technologies in the
learning process has revealed to some extent that the
Internet revolution, that is to say the change of
mentality produced by the use of digital technologies
in the global contemporary world, also affects and is
going to affect even more in the future the way in
which education can be managed.
In fact, it is becoming increasingly clear to
everybody that educational technologies are being
implemented rather indiscriminately almost
everywhere. That’s why we firmly believe they
should fulfill the users’ needs, their educational
purposes, the curricula with which they work and,
specifically, the training for the people who use
them. Despite this, research has yet to show that
ICTs have a significant impact on learning and a
special effort has to be made to find out how
technology is being used in an educational context.
One thing is clear: technologies are tools capable of
building learning frames. We already know that, but
the question now should be are we making the most
of it or is it being used to reproduce the "same old"
in virtual format? To have a learning frame
technologically built or assisted is not necessarily to
have good learning results. On the contrary, it is
necessary to enhance imagination to be able to open
our minds and be able to think on new horizons for
the teaching and learning of literature in the Digital
Age.
2 e-LEARNING OF
e-LITERATURE
Talking about 'digital literature' can cause seeming
uneasiness, even hostility in many people. People
that feel that something is being taken away from
them because letters moves from the quietness of
printed paper to this uncertain and heterogeneous
549
Borràs L. and Elies Adell J. (2007).
POIESIS AND TECHNOLOGIES - e-Learning Material Development in Literature.
In Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Web Information Systems and Technologies - Society, e-Business and e-Government /
e-Learning, pages 549-553
DOI: 10.5220/0001287405490553
Copyright
c
SciTePress
medium that is the computer, the screen, the
Internet. We wanted to tell our students: “If you
happen to belong to that category: stay calm and
we’ll show how literature can exist in other
platforms”.
Besides this, we wanted to open the scope of literary
studies by integrating into the mainstream other
types of literary and aesthetic expressions so far
excluded from it: especially e-literature or digital
literature (natively digital texts). The gaze that
guided traditional teaching of literature has been de-
centered by the use of e-learning methodologies and
academia will have to explicitly assume their new
locus of enunciation. Its old fashion exclusivity has
to be increasingly replaced by an inclusive view that
will come to consider alternative forms of
expression and to recognize differences and this
could be a paradigmatic change promoted by the use
of technology. We intended to develop a forum of
debate for these questions from inside an academic
subject, an optional subject though. Its main goal is
to rethink the role of literary studies at the beginning
of the twenty-first century and with the use of e-
learning. We expected to investigate the conflicts the
discipline is facing and the paths it has been
following in its diverse forms.
3 LITERARY STUDIES &
DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES
With this intention we created a piece of Digital
Literature in Catalan (the Diary of an Absence), to
show our students what a piece of digital narrative
could be and to provide them the real and complex
experience of reading the new literature in its own
medium and with its own rules. Since we wanted our
students to act as literary critics of works of digital
literature but the existing works worldwide would
have been a challenge to the linguistic competence
of most of the students, we have designed a work of
digital literature with different surfing possibilities
so that students can undertake an authentic and
complete exercise of literary criticism.
There are several categories inside what we
consider digital literature from web texts to
programmed digital texts, cybertexts (Aarseth 1997),
texts that are not only in digital format, but they also
use the digital format in producing effects which are
not possible in print. These digital texts are based on
a hypertextual structure (text is divided into shorter
segments, which then are connected to each other
with user-controllable links), but their functionality
is not limited to hypertextuality. In a technical sense
these text documents are actually computer
programs, and as such they may include all the
functionality a computer program can offer.
Temporal manipulation and control especially gain
wholly new potential with cybertexts in what has
been called “cybertextual narrativity” (Eskelinen
1999), where it is possible to strictly control the
reading time. For example, a text page may change
every 30 seconds forcing the reader to this reading
rhythm if she wants to read at all, or, make the text
change of form, explode, rain, move, etc. With the
current software, it is relatively easy to produce
kinetic texts. Even though this, at a first glance, may
seem more as case of movement and spatiality, it
naturally requires the possibility to control the
appearance of the text during a certain time period.
Thus, the temporal dimension is certainly essential
for kinetics. But if kinetics seemed to be more
inviting for poets than to prose writers, we have used
'Flash” to create this kinetic effect inside the text.
Of course all the multimedia imaginable may be
used, that is, the text may include sound, moving
image etc. We can find a complete variation of the
limited reading time when texts can only be read
once: after the text disappears from the screen, it is
deleted from the memory and cannot be accessed
again until next reading. In the opposite strategy the
reading time can also be somehow extended when it
is not possible to proceed from one part of the work
to another before a certain period of time –in this
case of read text- has passed. If the reader completes
the whole reading, follow the different paths and can
finally read every piece of single text hidden on the
CD, then there is a kind of “bonus track” text that
ideally closes the reading exercise, closes the
reading process of the work.
4 ARCHITECTURE OF THE
DIARY OF AN ABSENCE
Arranged in the form of a diary, the study case we
have developed follows the paths of absence by
delving into the pain that is caused by desire, a
desire that is reflected in the particular mixture of
emotions that is faced in the separation from the
loved one. To the idea of introspection arising from
the exercise of spiritual reflection and the flood of
torn feelings that this brings, there appears the idea
of the house as a cloister, which is the scenario in
which the tale in our hypertext exercise has been set.
The apparently illogical ups and downs of the
WEBIST 2007 - International Conference on Web Information Systems and Technologies
550
narrator’s thoughts are metaphorically translated into
the maze in which the reader gets lost, this reader
who has come in search of words that will lead
towards the interior that tells a story of love, of the
loss of love, of passion and of impossibility.
The Diary of an Absence aims to be an
example of intimate personal writing through
something which has been put into words but which
perhaps should have remained unsaid. In an exercise
of visual structuration of hypertextual narrative
(Koskimaa 1997), the text has been disposed
spatially in a closed space, with rooms to walk
through, just as we travel different routes when we
go deeper into the intimate truth of the suffering
narrator. We have chosen to use technology for a
goal that is aesthetic, narrative, semiotic and
hermeneutic. In this regard we must point out that
here you will not find a range of the most advanced
media as a technological exhibition without any
other purpose than the mere display of resources, but
rather a group of computer-based media in the
service of an aesthetic digital product. Its
fundamentally hypertextual nature evokes the most
secret and intimate aspect of hypertext –something
that becomes still more relevant when you bear in
mind the element of confession, of self-confession-
that is implicit in a private journal. At the same time
we find a combination of the creative synergical
possibilities of artistic languages like image and
music which tell us of its hybrid nature as a
cybertext.
The Diary of an Absence presents six possible
approaches to the text and therefore six different
possible readings.
1- First, there is the exploratory immersion in the
house-scenario that offers, through the rooms, words
acting as passwords and points of access to the
different days of the text. This is a way in which
curiosity and the chance in our choices take us to
words that act as a call for the hidden text to appear,
the text to which they refer, to which in fact they
belong, because this is where they come from.
2- Second, there is a nominal reading that comes
from the universe of words that have been selected
from the text.
3- One can follow a numerical reading by looking at
the ‘treasure map’ of the numbers allowing a
chronological reading of the diary pages. Bearing in
mind that each diary page corresponds to one day in
a month, a third reading is also possible based on the
texts that have been discovered/revealed in the linear
order of the calendar. We must remember, however,
that the correspondence between the word selected
and the day of the month to which it refers will not
be visible until the content of the word has been
revealed.
4- Another possible way of reading is the one which
allows us to consult the map or plan of the house and
its surroundings to see which objects or locations
give us an access to the text and where it is situated.
5- There is also a way to reach the text from the
objects in which the words have been assigned. So,
following this route, we could choose an object and
Figure 1: Reading paths.
Figure 2: The house-scenario.
Figure 3: The words’ constellation.
Figure 4: The numerical reading.
POIESIS AND TECHNOLOGIES - e-Learning Material Development in Literature
551
find out what page of the diary and in which room,
environment or location has been set and associated.
6- Finally, the map situates the different
lyrics that constitute this painful melody in space,
and one can allow oneself to be taken where the
music suggests, to go to the text that corresponds to
the music that is evoked. Words, numbers, objects,
lyrics and chance are the means for this particular
journey into the darkness of the soul.
In this context, we ask ourselves and our students: Is
reading something that can be shared? Will
everybody have read the same Diary if everybody’s
reading is necessarily different? Even one single
person can read it differently on different occasions.
To what extent will a linear reading of the Diary of
an Absence, the reading that is most literary and
least playful-exploratory, diverge from the reading
that one can carry out on paper with the fragmented
and random texts of the individual pages of a diary?
Will the choice of music, of the landscape
surroundings in which the words, objects and texts
are to be found, that is, will a digital reading
represent something more? Is this an aesthetic
experience different from the analogical,
conventional reading of the Diary as a diary? What
type of reading emerges in this changing context,
with so many senses involved, with so many options
for the reader? These and many other questions can
only be answered by our students after they have
engaged with the Diary.
Our first impression is very positive. We have
offered this subject only 2 semesters, but the
acceptance of the materials and the immersive
process of discovering e-literature from inside a
piece of it has been very encouraging. Despite the
fact that in a subject titled Universal Literary
Themes (Borràs 2005), we have had so many
problems when the materials were simply hypertext,
now that the task of exploration we are requiring is
much more complex, we have assumed more mature
–digitally alphabetized- students. The risk was there
and it is still there. We will have to wait and see.
5 CONCLUSIONS
We would have liked to explain other experiments
that we have carried out in e-learning of literature.
For example, we took a cabaret to the university and
studied it during a whole semester of the course on
Comparative Literature and then digitalized it in
order to create a bank of contents that can be reused
from then on. In fact, we combine electronic didactic
materials, on-line resources, digital libraries, web-
sites of reference, virtual exhibitions and a virtual
workshop with the different corrections of student’s
exercises that is very well much appreciated by the
students. This workshop is a web that allows them to
compare their exercises with those of their peers and
to benefit from their corrections too. Anyway, our
experience as lecturers developing e-learning
materials confirms us that it is necessary to seriously
consider that on-line teaching using these digital
resources implies becoming detached from acquired
habits and transforming the discourse of
communicative techniques. The opening up of the
temporal field for literary signification is a change,
which true magnitude we can only guess. In this
direction we have done our best and we should
expect new innovations to appear. A new approach
is now possible by the use of technology in e-
learning. Perhaps the question we would really need
to ask is what the nature of literature teaching has
been in order to salvage from old practices those
Figure 5: The treasure-map reading.
Figure 6: Reading through the objects.
Figure 7: A musical reading.
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new ways of learning that will allow us to move
forward and so, to convert this critical juncture in
which we are (let’s think in the transformation that
Higher Education is undergoing throughout Europe
and the “Bolognese reform”) into an opportunity.
REFERENCES
Aarseth, Espen (1997) Cybertext. Perspectives on Ergodic
Literature. Baltimore & London: The Johns Hopkins
University Press.
Borràs, Laura (2005) «E-Learning and Literary Studies.
Towards a New Culture of Teaching?», “Dichtung
Digital”, Issue 1/2005 (http://www.dichtung-
digital.com/2005/1/Castanyer/ last consulted:
13/11/2006).
Eskelinen, Markku (1999) "Cybertext Narratology",
presentation in Digital Arts and Culture 99 -
Conference. Video Recording in:
http://www.lcc.gatech.edu/events/dac99/webcast.html
Koskimaa, Raine (1997) "Visual Structuring of Hypertext
Narratives", electronic book review 6a.
http://www.altx.com/ebr/ebr6
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