New Media Writing Prize: Difference between revisions
Created article |
(No difference)
|
Revision as of 06:28, 26 July 2023
The New Media Writing Prize is an annual, juried competition awarding prizes to works of innovative digital fiction that uses interactivity, participatory elements and/or multimedia and achieves "good storytelling". Works that are shortlisted for the prize are seen as "cutting edge, exemplar works, which one might suppose demonstrate the best of everything that new-media storytelling can offer",[1] and are archived by the British Library.
History
The New Media Writing Prize was established in 2010 by Bournemouth University. The main prize was renamed the Chris Meade Memorial UK New Media Writing Prize in 2021. As of 2023 there is also a student award, an Opening Up Award, a Digital Journalism Award and an Interactive Digital Narrative for Social Good Award.[2] Some years have also included a People's Choice Award.[3]
Reception
A 2012 article in The Independent described the prize with a mix of sarcasm and appreciation, starting with the tagline "It's writing, Jim, but not as we know it."[3] The article describes the shortlisted works and encourages readers to vote, although its interviews with traditional publishers who assure the reader that it's "still OK to love real books" has been criticised.[4]
Winning and shortlisted works are archived by the British Library,[5][6] and on establishing the archive, archivists and prize organisers co-authored a paper outlining challenges of archiving interactive, multimodal literary works.[7] Several winning and shortlisted works were showcased in the 2023 British Library exhibition "Digital Storytelling".[8]
Winners of the main prize
Year | Author | Title | Country |
---|---|---|---|
2010 | Christine Wilks | Underbelly | United Kingdom |
2011 | Serge Bouchardon | Loss of Grasp | France |
2012 | Katharine Norman | Window | |
2013 | Esmeralda Kosmatopoulos | Siri and Me | Greece/France/Egypt |
2014 | Tender Claws (Samantha Gorman and Danny Cannizzaro) | Pry (iPad novella) | USA |
2015 | The High Muck a Muck Collective (Jin Zhang, Thomas Loh, Nicola Harwood, Bessie Wapp, Fred Wah) | High Muck a Muck: Playing Chinese | Canada |
2016 | J.R. Carpenter | The Gathering Cloud | Canada/United Kingdom |
2017 | James Attlee | The Cartographer’s Confession | United Kingdom |
2018 | Amira Hanafi | A Dictionary of the Revolution | USA / Egypt |
2019 | Maria Ivanova | The life of Grand Duchess Elizabeth[9] | Belarus |
2020 | Dan Hett | c-ya-laterrrr | United Kingdom |
2021 | Joannes Truyens | Neurocracy | United Kingdom |
2022 | Everest Pipkin | Anonymous Animal |
External links
References
- ^ Pope, James (2020). "Further on down the digital road: Narrative design and reading pleasure in five New Media Writing Prize narratives". Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies. 26 (1): 35–54. doi:10.1177/1354856517726603. ISSN 1354-8565.
- ^ "FAQs". New Media Writing Prize. Retrieved 2023-07-26.
- ^ a b "The Blagger's Guide To: New media writing". The Independent. 2012-11-24. Retrieved 2023-07-26.
- ^ Carpenter, J.R. (2019). "Writing on the Cusp of Becoming Something Else". In Jefferies, Janis; Member, Sarah (eds.). Whose Book is it Anyway? A View From Elsewhere on Publishing, Copyright and Creativity. Open Book Publishers. doi:10.11647/OBP.0159.10. ISBN 9781783746514.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link) - ^ "New Media Writing Prize | UKWA Topics and Themes". www.webarchive.org.uk. Retrieved 2023-07-26.
- ^ Clark, Lynda; Rossi, Giulia Carla; Wisdom, Stella (2020), Bosser, Anne-Gwenn; Millard, David E.; Hargood, Charlie (eds.), "Archiving Interactive Narratives at the British Library", Interactive Storytelling, vol. 12497, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 300–313, doi:10.1007/978-3-030-62516-0_27, ISBN 978-3-030-62515-3, retrieved 2023-07-26
- ^ Rossi, Giulia Carla; Pyke, Tegan; Pope, James; Skains, R. Lyle; Wisdom, Stella (2022). "The New Media Writing Prize Special Collection" (PDF). eBLJ 2022. doi:10.23636/a529-w529.
- ^ "Digital Storytelling in 2023: A New Year of New Media". blogs.bl.uk. Retrieved 2023-07-26.
- ^ Campbell, Andy (2020-04-14). "The Grand Duchess Elizabeth". New Media Writing Prize. Retrieved 2023-07-26.
- ^ "Homepage". New Media Writing Prize. Retrieved 2023-07-26.
- ^ "New Media Writing Prize | UKWA Topics and Themes". www.webarchive.org.uk. Retrieved 2023-07-26.