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2024 | 33(2) | 51-70

Article title

Postdigital Reading Strategies in Emersive VR Fiction: Empirical Insights

Content

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Languages of publication

Abstracts

EN
In this article we introduce a theory of ambimedial reading as a distinctive postdigital reading strategy from an empirical study with readers of Virtual Reality (VR) fiction. VR is known for its immersive, experiential qualities yet less for its affordances for literary fiction and verbal art. In experimental VR fiction, 360-degree, fully embodied spatial experiences can engender diverse ontological spheres, leaving readers straddling multiple diegetic and extradiegetic layers of storytelling. These ontological ruptures, evoked by what we call ambispatial design, can lend VR fiction an emersive quality, constructing readers as self-conscious voyeurs rather than granting them an unreflected, immersive experience. To illustrate these emersive effects, we consider participants’ discursive responses to reading Randall Okita’s VR memoir, The Book of Distance. We show how readers attempt to make sense of an unfamiliar postdigital storytelling experience by means of ambimedial responses, in which they attempt to reconcile an unfamiliar medial experience with more familiar ones. Our data shows that emersed readers conceptualize their doubly embodied and hybridized position as a constituent of both the actual world and digital VR world, a phenomenon we refer to as dual embodied metalepsis.

Year

Volume

Pages

51-70

Physical description

Dates

published
2024

Contributors

  • University of Regensburg
author
  • Sheffield Hallam University

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

Biblioteka Nauki
57112799

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.ojs-doi-10_7311_0860-5734_33_2_04
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