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022_000040/0000

Digital media and storytelling in higher education

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Author
Anita Lanszki
Field of science
Kultúrakutatás, kulturális sokféleség / Cultural studies, cultural diversity (12950), Kommunikációs hálózatok, média, információs társadalom / Communication networks, media, information society (10104), Pedagógia / Pedagogy (12910)
Type of publication
monográfia
022_000040/0030
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022_000040/0030

OCR

30 I Digital Media and Storytelling in Higher Education linked to processes related to visual (who sees and how? - ocularization), auditory (who hears and how? - auricularization) and cognitive information (who knows what? - focalization). Bordwell (1985), from a cognitive psychology approach, argued that the viewer’s understanding is supported by his or her own vision, hearing, schemata, and hypothesis-making abilities on the one hand, and by the causal architecture of the film narrative on the other. Branigan (1992), like Bordwell, argued that the viewer relies on schemata to receive films, and can only reconstruct the story from the linguistic references on the screen if he or she has a prior set of schemata about the spatio-temporal dimension, genre and stylistic signifiers of the narrative on the screen. These enable the viewer to construct the world of the film narrative (diegetic space). The narrative structure is a set of rules that organizes all the characters and events of a story into a whole spatio-temporal and causal order. Fiizi describes the narrative schema as [...] an organisation of knowledge that the recipient has in advance and that plays a decisive role in recognising, ordering, and remembering narrative patterns. A narrative schema consists of the following components: (1) introduction of the setting and characters (extract or prologue); (2) explanation of the facts (orientation, exposition); (3) initial event; (4) emotional expression or statement of purpose by the protagonist; (5) complications; (6) resolution; (7) reactions to the resolution (epilogue) (Fuzi, 2006, p. 10). In his narratological approach, Branigan (2013) argued that the story is conveyed to the receiver through the signal system of the narration, who cannot reconstruct the story without prior knowledge of the conventions of the film’s two-dimensional signal system. Grodal (1997) argued that the emotional impact of narration is also strongly influenced by the genre expectations of the audience. As an example, he cites a scene in which the hero falls into a trap, which may result in crying if the viewer interprets it from a melodramatic perspective, laughter from a comedic perspective, or a scream from a horror perspective. The viewer understands the film narrative if he or she can interpret the events of the plot as a story- regardless of the order in which these events follow each other- and understand that the plot of the film can unfold in several threads. However, when analysing the structure of the film narrative, it is also necessary to take into account the fact that the general rules of film narration are not valid across the entire audiovisual universe since the classical narrative forms have been supplemented by alternative forms since the second half of the 20" century. These forms can also be traced back to conscious directorial choices, as directors, especially in postmodernity, deliberately depart from the rules of classical film narration. It is also important to note that many new narrative media have emerged in recent years, and the

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