Exploration in Digital LiteratureMain MenuIntroduction to Exploration in Digital LiteratureWorks CitedAbout the Student AuthorsLucy Dunlop0f87c154df9d1f5b9c9db43bf755c92458e4029aChristina Dang16f8741b7c1912c88412ac3ecd3d51712dc3f3f0Deena Lang131c436bb0b401aee393cec40c25d6b298e0d091Amelia Tan072c06bdfc7e7ce98f28891a102d135bb24f1261
Option 3: Looking at the different parts of the city at the reader's pace
12019-11-15T17:04:43-08:00Amelia Tan072c06bdfc7e7ce98f28891a102d135bb24f1261355683plain2019-11-15T17:21:40-08:00Amelia Tan072c06bdfc7e7ce98f28891a102d135bb24f1261The option of "take another walk" allows the reader to switch from reading about one area of the city to reading about another at the reader's own pace. This option opens the idea that exploration is very individualized. No two readers can observe the city at the same speed and interpret the unknown parts of the city in the same way. In this way, exploration can also be personal since everyone has a unique way of perceiving they are exploring around them in indirect ways like through digital media.
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1media/Capture_thumb.JPG2019-11-15T16:47:44-08:00Amelia Tan072c06bdfc7e7ce98f28891a102d135bb24f1261Walking pace options1Walking pace options in J.R. Carpenter's work "Walks from City Bus Routes"media/Capture.JPGplain2019-11-15T16:47:44-08:00Amelia Tan072c06bdfc7e7ce98f28891a102d135bb24f1261