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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_000040/0164
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022_000040/0164

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164] Digital Media and Storytelling in Higher Education produced by the Budapest School in the 1970s, there was already a tendency to include the life story of the person portrayed in the film. Such was the case with Gyuri Cséplő, in which the main characters private life and way of thinking were revealed, representing individuals from the same sociocultural background. Such representation serves a high degree of emotional identification. This tendency has continued in the history of Hungarian documentary films, especially in the work of Tamäs Almäsi (Stöhr, 2019). The life stories revealed in narrative documentaries are also invaluable in the teaching of history and social studies.°? The analysis of interactive digital narratives with non-linear or branching narratives can also be included in a screenwriting course, as many digital applications allow the modular structure of the narrative to be visualized in a way that is easy to follow (see Part II. Chapter 4). Although technical media have always been present in film and photography-related courses, they are now present in virtually all areas of arts higher education. In performing arts research and training institutions, narratives are constantly being archived and students learn to digitally edit their own work. At the Moholy University of the Arts, students can learn the latest digital techniques of storyboard and comic book creation in the Visual Storytelling course. Atthe Hungarian Dance University, students can develop their skills in using tools for sound and video editing in the Media Studies course. Students at art universities have a strong sense of professional commitment combined with continuous professional self-reflection. Students feel strongly motivated to express their emotions and thoughts through artistic creation. Those preparing for a career in dance have expressed their professional life stories, motivations and plans in the form of digital stories. DST workshops give them the opportunity to reflect on their professional lives and to express themselves through new media. 1he digital story is an artifact in itself and a multiple representation, as it is composed of visual, musical and textual elements. With DST, students can learn how to verbalize and synthesize their thoughts and how to achieve online self-representation through their stage photos (Lanszki, 2016c). DST can also be used to teach genre theory in humanities courses on art theory and in the mimetics of arts, dance, film, and theater studies. In the ds106 online course, the genre characteristics of horror film were taught through DST methodology (see Part IV, Chapter 7). But transmedia storytelling is also an excellent tool for art theory courses, providing an opportunity for students to compare representations of a theme or fable across different artworks. Data-driven storytelling can also be integrated into art theory courses, as 59. E.g., Our Cells (Sejtjeink), which presents couples attempting artificial insemination, or the biographical memoir Judgingly (Itéletleniil), which reveals the life stories of women imprisoned for political reasons in Kistarcsa (Stéhr, 2019).

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