Hey /lit/, what's new and innovative in the world of fiction? What narrative forms exist today that weren't around 100 years ago?
>>7406465
tweets are pretty cool imho
>>7406465
greentext
4chan posts
Transmedia storytelling
>>7406465
It's a shame beauty is so rarely considered when designing buildings today. Even when I went to Dubai and saw Burj Khalifa I didn't feel the sense of awe and wonder I feel when looking at old churches and castles. It's tall and that's impressive, sure, but there's nothing beautiful about it. At least brutalism isn't popular anymore. That seemed to be a campaign against beauty.
>>7406504
Does exist a treatise on >greentext?
Or will lurkeg suffice?
>>7407548
Romanticism emphasized the individual, the subjective, the irrational, the imaginative, the personal, the spontaneous, the emotional, the visionary, and the transcendental
>>7407545
The level of engagement offered by transmedia storytelling is essential to the Me or Millennial Generation as no single media satisfy their curiosity or lifestyle
>>7407634
Transmediation can refer to the process of "responding to cultural texts in a range of sign systems -- art, movement, sculpture, dance, music, and so on -- as well as in words."
>>7406504
>Who is the master who makes the grass green ?
>>7407589
>sounds retarded when read aloud
>>7406504
>t>h>i>s >t>b>h >f>a>m
>>7407548
that castle is a 19th century fake piece of shit to be honest. you might as well build one of them today, it will be just as disingenuous.