http://courses.washington.edu/hypertxt/cgi-bin/book/contexts/koreansatire.html
This link is of an actual written interview, pretty interesting and revealing
http://www.brown.edu/Research/dichtung-digital/2005/2/Yoo/index-engl.htm
]]>In contrast, the version with the woman’s voice and the use of 1st person allowed me to create a character in my head. For some reason, the creation of this character allowed me to ascribe different emotions to the story being told to me and I was able to better imagine the story being told. When the woman’s voice told me the difference in the neighbors and her actual dream, the story felt more tragic because I was controlling the character. I found this reaction counter-intuitive to my expectations.
It was also interesting how the use of the Chinese or Korean, whatever they were, characters with the second version put the story in a cultural context where the story was taking place in Asia and I imagined some kind of military force taking a woman out of her home. It was just interesting how the smallest changes to a story, like point of view and the addition of another language changed my interpretation and my ability to interpret the story.
]]>The background has the look of a museum with high ceilings and and shiny floors. Â The music that the red words dance to is upbeat. Â It speeds as the story continues. Â The story being read in a woman’s voice is a tragic one. Â A woman is taken from her house and into the street in her underwear. Â She is being accused of being a “traitor.” Â She is being moved by gunpoint to a location where she will ultimately be killed by being shot in the head. Â She claims that the only thing that will be life-saving is remembering the dream that she was dreaming when she was awakened by the invader.
Her dream involves her and her lover, who are “caressed” by a cool sea breeze, sit on a terrace by the sea and “drank to the strains of an unbearable sweet Bossa Nova.” Â Bossa Nova, according the Wiki, is a style of Brazilian music, similar to jazz.
The story repeats over and over. Â First in english, with charactered subtitles, then with characters and english subtitles. Â I do not know what political movement this is referring to. Â The main character, who is at her moment of death, grasps onto her cool dream to stay sane and hopeful. Â It makes the sacrifice of her life for her beliefs, whatever it/they may have been, worthwhile.
The repetition make the story unending and therefore forever relevant.
]]>I liked the version with the voice reading it because it made me consider it from a woman’s point of view because of the voice when I had been imagining it as man the first couple times I saw it. It also helped to hear it because I couldn’t always read the text as it was flashing by. In the version with the strings I was able to see more of the text at the same time which helped me to piece the story together better.
]]>“Bust Down the Doors!” really is what pushed me over the edge of not truly enjoying the work. I read and watch the first one, and have no problem understanding the story of a break-in. But then I have to listen to Microsoft Sam and lose all focus. I have to give them credit is very very creative, not the story, but the different ways of presenting the material. Does it matter that it probably took them five minutes to throw this together? Not really. But they could have used something other than the generic windows voice that reminds me of Radiohead, but that might be the very reason this gets old so fast.
The idea is not overly creative, to be honest anyone could have made these, but they thought of the idea first. And I think that is the reason why it grows old, we all combine different parts of programs and make things everyday. When you upload pictures you have to create a caption, crop your photo, and upload it to the internet. That is really all that is happening here, so going back to the one we watched last week, “The Art of Sleep,” is uploading a picture and caption on facebook art? I know this is not the same as facebook uploading, but it seems almost out of date. I know its the first time I’ve seen anything of this nature, but really can we see this lasting more than 25 years? In my opinion no. Technology advances, and people are always wanting the newest and best gadgets. But the likes of Hemmingway and Larsen will always be there with their paperback or if you prefer ebook. But one day this “literature” will not run on the most up-to-date flash player. Which makes me feel like this is a fad, great at first but tiring after a while.
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