tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-316655172009-03-01T17:20:04.429-08:00young readerIrene Jnoreply@blogger.comBlogger20125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1161671204489537212006-10-23T23:04:00.000-07:002007-03-12T07:52:30.786-07:00What did they say?Thanks to blogger.com for the connection failure... Tim has given the "Bible in Electronic Culture" class an extention till tommorrow. I just thought I would give an overview of what the class has been all about .... the reader can be able to 'discern' the members' position as far as the electronic culture is concerned . Electronic just makes it easier, so they say... read <a href="http://www.bigbible.org/aisea/">'sea'</a>, <a href="http://www.bigbible.org/moana/">'the dawn'</a> and the <a href="http://www.bigbible.org/denise/">'denisek qoheleth'</a>. Read for yourself...................<br /><br /><ul><li><a href="http://www.useit.com/papers/webwriting/">Web writing and reading</a></li><li><a href="http://carbon.cudenver.edu/~mryder/itc_data/hypertext.html">Hypertext</a></li><li><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Links_(web_browser)">Links</a></li><li><a href="http://virtual.park.uga.edu/~hypertxt/tarling.html">understanding print and electronic cultures</a></li><li>I'm sure denisek will be up in arms against <a href="http://www-unix.oit.umass.edu/~eleclaw/ylj1.html">THIS</a></li><li>What about the impact of the '<a href="http://www.hawaii.edu/aln/lit.htm">revolution'</a> on our cultures?</li></ul><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-116167120448953721?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1160887192298868482006-10-14T21:14:00.000-07:002006-10-14T21:39:52.306-07:00All yee writing for the web....<p>It is sad indeed that the semester is coming to an end and so is the course on "Bible in Electronic Context"- I mean just for the course not that I'm anywhere near being on holiday(-:)</p><ul><li>As I finish my class project for the course, Racheal McAlpines book on <em>Web Word Wizadry: A Guide to Writing for the Web and Intranet</em> serves as a guide and a warning to future writings on the web.</li><li>To develop a quality site and one that has our audience in mind, this book is a must read. Web writing is not easy as it sounds after all. How in the world can the publisher "create mental pictures of the people who are thier audience"?Imagine the kind of keywords and terms the audience would use with the search engines to searc for the sites? Reading her book makes this sound... everthinking of writing for the web,</li></ul><ol><li>Have you taken into consideration that most web readers skim? NO OR MINIMAL SCROLLING (I hope this does not mean web readers suffer from selective amnesia..)</li><li>What about the fact that sites are globally read, readers whose primary language is not English.... (take care of those big words)</li><li>How about "perfect navigation, worthwhile content, user friendly design, and good writing?</li></ol><p>blogging will go on though........</p><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-116088719229886848?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1159088465342264302006-09-24T01:45:00.000-07:002006-09-24T02:01:05.363-07:00Authority of texts: Talks with interpretersThis post is fulfilling my promise to follow up on <a href="http://www.ctheory.net/printer.aspx?id=380">Lurie's</a> agurment on the authority of texts on the web. I had a chat with my hermeneutic lecturers and decided I will not cut N paste any bit of thier feedback. Hope you bear the length, I'm just being a good student -:)<br /><br /><ul><li>This is what Dr. Philip Culbertson had to say after co-teaching a course on “The Bible in Popular Culture” </li></ul><p>I showed the students, first, a very familiar translation of Psalm 23:<br /><br />The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want.<br />He makes me lie down in green pastures;<br />He leads me beside the still waters;<br />He restores my soul.<br />He leads me in right paths<br />For his name’s sake.<br />Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,<br />I shall fear no evil;<br />For you are with me;<br />Your rod and your staff—they comfort me.<br />You prepare a table before me<br />In the presence of my enemies;<br />You anoint my head with oil;<br />My cup overflows.<br />Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me<br />All the days of my life,<br />And I shall dwell in the house of the Lord,<br />My whole life long.<br /><br />The students were very quiet as I read the psalm from the document projector. There seemed to be no comment from them, but rather a sense of listening and waiting. Next I showed them the recent HipHop translation of the Psalm, from Timothy Holder’s The Hip Hop Prayer Book (New York: Church Publishing, 2006):<br /><br />The Lord is all that, I need for nothing.<br />He allows me to chill.<br />He keeps me from being heated<br />And allows me to breathe easy.<br />He guides my life so that I can<br />Represent and give shout outs in His name.<br />And even though I walk through the hood of death,<br />I don’t back down, for You have my back.<br />The fact that He has me<br />Covered allows me to chill.<br />He provides me with back-up<br />In front of player-haters,<br />And I know that I am a baller<br />And life will be phat.<br />I fall back in the Lord’s crib<br />For the rest of my life.<br /><br />I read out the HipHop text slowly, and discovered that the students laughed often, and rather loudly, at the end of each line. I was a bit surprised: I’d never thought of Ps. 23 as a source of amusement. I felt confused both by the text itself, and by the students’ reactions. I felt how unfamiliar the new translation was, and I felt disoriented or de-stabilized. My struggle was, I think, to figure out whether I could move a familiar set of meanings from one set of comfortable signifiers to another set of startling and uncomfortable signifiers. I felt as though the “assumed” (my assumptions, obviously) original signified meaning had disappeared in the “trans-lation”. I felt as if I had lost my ability to play within the familiar text of Ps.23, and with that loss of play came a kind of grief.<br /><br />This seems like a great example of deconstruction, in that the new translation seemed, to me, to render the text incoherent. I stumbled, in my heart as well as my head. How could it be possible that “chill” means the same thing as “lie down in green pastures”? If “chill” doesn’t mean that, then what does it mean? I wondered if the original author of Ps. 23 would have recognized “chill” as a synonym? Would she have recognized any convergence of signified meaning between “chill” and “lie down in green pastures”?<br /><br />The new translation did not match the “hyperlinks” embedded in me as a 62-year-old white male raised from birth in the church. Ps. 23 carries, for me, the authority of familiarity, plus a variety of emotional agglutinates including comfort, nurture, and a hint of controlled threat. Interestingly, I could find those agglutinates in the new translation, in spite of the way the unfamiliar signifiers disoriented me, but finding them was hard work, and not particularly satisfying.<br /><br />Did this exercise jeopardize a sense of divine authority in Ps. 23? No, because I don’t generally consider the Psalms to be divinely-inspired, but rather, a group of hymnic poems that carry the authority of profound human experience in the face of an imagined divine. But I have spent, like millions of others before me, some time looking to certain passages in the Bible in order to “borrow” the comfort that some human being before me has found and used. This is what seemed removed by dealing with a vocabulary that confronted me with the profound disorientation of implied meanings with which I could not identify. But I also wondered whether if I could hear the HipHop text read out loud, as I have so often heard the traditional text read out loud, that I could experience the same emotional ebb-and-flow through the voice of someone to whom the vocabulary seemed to “fit”. <br /><br />To bring this all back to Peter Lurie’s argument, I think there is more at work here than Derrida’s deconstructionism is designed to contain. I liked Lurie’s article because of the questions it made me ask myself, and I am fascinated by Derrida. But I also believe it is virtually impossible for Christians to read the Bible without some sort of involvement with our psychodynamic inner world, for surely, after all, that is where our sense of “authority” lies. <br /><br />Some years ago, I argued in an article that because the word authority is built on the Latin root auctor, which means to nourish, that any authority which does not nourish is false authority. I approach the authority of the Biblical text, then, as an exercise in nurturance, however loosely that term might be defined. In the end, I think I was more nourished by Lurie’s article than I was by the HipHop trans-lation of Ps.23. Lurie’s article allowed me to “play” inside my inner world, and thus nurtured me, and in that sense, offered authority. The HipHop translation disoriented me so much that I forgot how to play. <br /><br />So does a web reading of a Biblical text dissolve its authority automatically? No, not to me, as long as the web reading leaves room for nurturing playfulness. It’s only when that playfulness is removed that the authority of the text becomes jeopardized.</p><p> </p><p align="center">More talks with the......................</p><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-115908846534226430?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1158200809992900462006-09-13T19:04:00.000-07:002006-09-13T19:31:52.116-07:00Talks on AuthorityA<a href="http://bigbible.org/aisea/2006/09/bible-and-hypertext.html">isea</a> has recently posted on the topic of <a href="http://bigbible.org/aisea/2006/09/bible-and-hypertext.html">bible and hypertext</a>. he follows from my previous concern raised by Luire's article on the web and the authority of the text. from a perspective of interpretation he says<br /><br /><blockquote><p><br /><em>"When I read a text and try to interpret that particular text, does the text (Bible) still holds the authority or have I taken that authority from the text? In my opinion, in providing my own interpretation of a text will give me the authority. On the other hand, if I provide a variety of interpretations I’m handing over the authority to the reader."</em></p><ul><li><div align="left">he is clearly speaking of <strong>authority to interpret </strong>of which the web tends to promote. </div></li><li><div align="left">the web also gives the <strong>authority to rewrite</strong> the text. not in terms of a new bible but as the readers surf from thier point of interest, there is an aspect of rewriting.</div></li></ul><p align="left">but even then, the text remains text......................... as <a href="http://bigbible.org/young/2006/09/jacques-derrida-in-digital-enviroment.html">te tapo</a> says "we extract but still go back to the same text"! So, what about the 'authority'?</p></blockquote><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-115820080999290046?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1157966490997764662006-09-11T02:00:00.000-07:002006-09-11T02:28:46.346-07:00"Right to remain silent..."upto today, i thought "you have the right to remain silent, anything you say or.. will be used against (<em>or for you) </em>in a court of law" is only to be heard during arrests.<br /><br />in my class today, (* oh like i noticed we and while are not bed mates so I corrected it after publishing) while learning how to evaluate web resources (of course for easy understanding comparing and contrasting with the print world). One of things that came up was how easily web publishing enables scholars to get away with comments, quotes and the likes. anytime the mind plays its usuall tricks, the scholar can always change whatever comment and publish again.<br /><br />now, remember how many times we have read pleasing or unpleasing quotes from print books even after the author has come up with upto the 5th Edition to maybe change his or her position? in some way, the scholar can never make a wrong write once it has appeared in print and reached those library shelves. "whatever you write will be used against or for you in footnotes, in-texts or endnotes... no matter how many editions you publish"<br /><br />This is just one difference between web publishing and print publishing<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-115796649099776466?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1157857200518305672006-09-09T19:08:00.000-07:002006-09-09T22:16:38.326-07:00Texts, Hypertext and Authority of textsI did put up a post on <a href="http://bigbible.org/young/2006/09/jacques-derrida-in-digital-enviroment.html">Peter Lurie taking up Derridas concept of </a><em><a href="http://bigbible.org/young/2006/09/jacques-derrida-in-digital-enviroment.html">deconstruction</a> </em>to explain how the web works in reading of texts.<br /><br />It is quite interesting how Lurie apply this concept and probably succeeds. however, is he right in claiming that linking texts of hypertext dissolve the authority of text? <a href="http://www.bigbible.org/blog/">Tim</a> in one of his posts has got me thinking of this and want to explore it further.<br /><br />I can not stop thinking of what "authority" we are talking about here. but first what <a href="http://www.angelfire.com/journal/althehare/derrida.html">deconstruction</a> aims at;<br /><br /><ul><li>"generating conflicting meanings from the same text, and playing those meanings against each other...... (T. K. Seung)"</li><li>"seeks to subtle, often unwitting ideological inconsistencies in a text that seem hard to resolve and that prevent interpreters from claiming that it has a fixed meaning"- claiming the text does not have fixed meaning may also imply that it speaks to people in different ways and under different circumstances. once the text is able to speak to the reader in any way, or even not to speak at all after unveiling ambiguities- it definately has authority.</li><li>"critical overturning of all structures and hierarchies on which we have built beliefs and belief systems in culture (D. Jasper)"</li></ul><p>but like I said our understanding of 'authority' when it comes to biblical texts has also undergone some significant changes over the years.</p><ul><li><em>In ages authority of texts is achieved when one is able to trust the scripture as the rule of life. The debate has been whether the texts become a rule of life after being asked questions (probably deconstructed) or just as it is (based on other features like inerrancy, inspiration..)</em></li></ul><p>Within biblical studies, reading such as feminist readings/hermeneutic has proved beyond doubt that texts have to be peeled off their social, cultural, political lacings before we can make any claims.</p><p>Now, the aim of hypertext like Lurie explains is to understand the text better- the literal, historical, social and even the cultural dimensions of it. The text becomes a reference point (authority). after the deconstruction, one chooses which way to go- after getting appropriate meaning. In one way or the other, the text becomes a rule- give direction to the online reader. It is therefore inappropriate to say the web rips the text off authority ( as a rule).</p><p>However, if "authority' in Peter's case is to mean consistency/ in print, the text guides where to start and finish- then the text maybe dissolve of any authority online as the reader chooses where to start and end- the text nolonger guides its reading......</p><p>Check out for more on this :-) </p><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-115785720051830567?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1157854102823265242006-09-09T18:58:00.000-07:002006-10-14T21:53:29.146-07:00Page vs Screen?I see the use of hypertext as one aspect of reading and therefore agree that it is not necessary to make competing claims (page vs Screen):<br /><br />I think Tim Burkeley is right in his article <em>Form, medium and Function, i</em>t is more important to talk about the rhetorical effects of presenting texts in print or hypertexts- or the rhetorical needs of the different genres of communication rather than a focus on thier "technological containers"-<br /><br /><ul><li>The monograph and the commentary: the commentary as txt replicating another prior text which may feature repetitions of various sorts, has more cross-references than a monograph. A mongraph provides a coherent argument presenting a particular case, or thesis over an extended period of time.- Commentary explains a prior text. (hypertexts used before- only extended in digital)</li></ul><p>Print restrict the hypertextual nature of commentaries (footnotes and bibliographical information)- fingers move back and forth and maybe the reader may never get hold of the quoted book.- Digital makes hypertext easier to read</p><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-115785410282326524?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1157779639758068742006-09-08T21:48:00.000-07:002006-09-08T22:27:19.770-07:00Jacques Derrida in digital enviroment?<div align="left"><a href="http://www.ctheory.net/articles.aspx?id=380"><em><span style="color:#663333;">Peter Lurie</span></em></a><em><span style="color:#663333;"> in "Why the Web Will Win the Culture Wars for the Left: Deconstructing Hyperlinks" has chosen to explain the contribution of internet to reading using Derrida's deconstruction. I'm interested in his post because of my </span></em><a href="http://bigbible.org/young/2006/09/future-scholarship.html"><em><span style="color:#663333;">comment</span></em></a><em><span style="color:#663333;"> that internet scholarship can be viewed as one of the many hermeneutical approaches. While I'm not sure Peter sufficiently apply deconstruction , he manages to illuminate how the web works in reading of biblical passages and the internet as a post-modernist tool of reading. which I think was his aim anyway.</span></em></div><ul><li>One thing for sure is that in reading a passage online, the authority of reading the texts lies with the surfer. The reader chooses where to begin and end his/her reading using the building blocks of the web (HTML, hyperlinks, frames, and meta-tags). "They combine to create a highly associative, endlessly referential and contingent environment that provides an expanse of information at the same time that it subverts any claim to authority, since another view is just a click away." - Now here is where Derrida comes in for Peter. </li></ul><blockquote></blockquote><blockquote></blockquote><blockquote><blockquote><p>"Hypertext markup language (HTML) provides graphic display instructions to the web browser. Codes control the presentation of each web page, including pictures, colors, fonts and the organization of text. Without HTML, a web browser would show a continuous scroll of plain text. Although HTML is normally invisible, the viewer can select a viewing option that exposes the program codes. With HTML visible, the structure of each web page is laid bare, like a theater with transparent curtains and sets, so the lighting crew, scaffolding, director and actors in the wings were all visible. Hyperlinks, which often appear in underlined blue text, provide the essential connectivity of the web, enabling the user to jump from one page to another, a sort of black hole through which a viewer can jump in and emerge in another place. Framing divides a web site into separate windows, each displayed in a separate part of the screen and independently functional. Hyperlinks connect each frame, allowing the user to move among screens without leaving the site. Search engines organize information on the web as well, while helping users locate information they want. Google returns a short description of and hyperlink to a list of sites ranked by likely relevance. In many cases the web page communicates to the search engine through metatags, which are encoded in the HTML and usually consist of key words that provide an associative description of the site itself."</p><blockquote></blockquote><p align="center"><strong>how about a biblical passage?</strong></p><ul><li><div align="left">"For the deconstructionist, each text is endlessly referential, a web of associations and connections that is finally ambiguous.- reading the bible onlineReading the bible online at <a href="http://www.bible.org/">www.bible.org</a> is a typically interactive effort, one that despite the intentions of the Biblical Studies Foundation, which operates the site, explodes the authority of the text. The viewer chooses any of eighteen different versions of the bible, and then finds a matrix of hyperlinks organized by chapter and verse that link to the requested section. Four frames provide the biblical text and accompanying information, including footnotes hyperlinked to other sources with explanatory material, a hyperlinked index of every other chapter, and links to the Biblical Studies Foundation's homepage, as well as other related sources. The site also contains the customary search function, which appears on the left, and of course the internet browser itself has a search function that is always visible, so that an engaged reader may be constantly toggling between biblical text, commentary in the footnotes, word searches suggested by the bible or footnotes or a combination of both. Readers unfamiliar with a word may click on the footnote with a short definition or synonym. If that is unsatisfactory, typing the word into the search function will yield a link to a dictionary of biblical words, terms and phrases that may offer a more refined and accurate definition. The reader may be satisfied and return to the text or pursue the matter further, needing just two clicks to find the same passage in an alternative translation. If the reader is interested in a historical analysis of the passage, a search for ?biblical history' yields and array of relevant academic and religious sites from all perspectives. A reader might devote a day to pursuing a single passage, a single line, finding herself farther and farther afield from the original text and translation. Indeed, she might forget which site she was reading. Reading the bible online is an exploration of multiple sources, commentators and bibliographic tributaries." </div></li><li><div align="left">"The Web invites, even demands that its users go back, forward, around and elsewhere in an associative search for meaning.- - </div></li></ul><p align="left"><em>Peter Lurie however fails to point out how the web also enable the reader to deconstruct ideologies maybe in terms of policies that accompany web pages. this i suppose was an important aspect in Derridas concept of deconstruction.</em></p><ul><blockquote><div align="left"> </div></blockquote><blockquote></blockquote><blockquote></blockquote><blockquote></blockquote><blockquote></blockquote><blockquote></blockquote><blockquote></blockquote></ul></blockquote></blockquote><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-115777963975806874?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1157777125231649102006-09-08T21:20:00.000-07:002006-09-08T21:45:25.240-07:00Future scholarship- historyThe study of texts depending on the approach taken involves in one way or the other a study of the world behind the text, of the texts, or infront of the text (of the reader). keen readers of biblical texts are involved in study of history at some point.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.futureofthebook.org/blog/archives/2006/07/teaching_in_a_collaborative_in.html"><em>McClymer</em></a><em> contibute to our undertanding of how the "collaborative, multimediated, networked, nonlinear, and multi-accented environment" enable a new way of studying history.</em><br /><br />Whatever part of the history of the text we choose to study, "the evidence comes in a wide array of forms.... we know there are crucial missing pieces."<br /><br />The space, economic and like factors of the print cunlture force us to choose which part of the evidence is more appropriate and discard the others. We are unable to give the other evidence in full except maybe refer our readers to other sources- in footnotes, endnotes or an attached summary.<br /><br />Though speaking of history as a discpline, I agree with McClymer that any form of history requires a "high degree of flexibility". Others we wrongly assume history to be a well- structured field. Leave alone the fact that choosing of what is appropriate or what goes to the print is coloured with many ideologies and biases.<br /><br />The digital culture through tools like links enable the historian to give all the collected evidence and maybe help the readers understand his/her choice of which is appropriate.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-115777712523164910?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1157775637817574272006-09-08T19:51:00.000-07:002006-09-08T21:20:38.046-07:00Future scholarship- for students<em>This post is the second of the insights from thefutureofthebook project. The post is based on </em><a href="http://www.futureofthebook.org/blog/archives/2006/07/mediacommons_2_renewed_publics.html"><em>renewed publics, revised pedagogies</em></a><em>- Anvi Santos. </em><br /><br /><span style="color:#660000;">It is one thing to be overwhelmed by such abundant knowledge that new scholarship provide and enables research by biblical students/students from other fields, but another thing to be able to determine the creibility fo the information. </span><br /><br />There are a vairety of bible study blogs and biblical studies related blogs, but how do we determine quality? Fulfiling the intentions of Socrates that "the role of the intellectual is to bring the fire of knowledge closer to the people and therefore enriching their lives instead of having it locked up in the Ivory Tower in an autistic discourse among academics" is not without a challenge.<br /><br />Santos argues that the new technology offers ways of pedagogies and community intervention. this include;<br /><blockquote></blockquote><blockquote><p align="left">"the development, drafting and revision of critical writing would<br />happen in public before scholarly work is put through the traditional<br />blind "peer-review" process- this gives the students the opportunity to see,<br />learn and participate in the process other than only being<br />presented with finished works to digest."<br /></p></blockquote>but the students would not be able to participate without the approparite tools. by this I mean "critical digital literacy skills" to write and research in this enviroment as "creators, critics, analysts, activists, or consumers".<br /><br /><em>insitutions as well as individuals are beginning to take up this challenge. Courses on digital media are being introduced among others within the field of biblical studies. Glad to note that i'm currently taking a course on "Bible in electronic context" to be able to critically participate in the new scholarship. almost half way through the course, i have learnt;</em><br /><br /><ul><li>variuos components of hypertext resources, such that i can participate in a discussion as well as set up my own resource for learning purposes including researching.</li><li>members of the class are also able to <a href="http://www.bigbible.org/denise/">dialogue</a> with <a href="http://www.bigbible.org/moana/">each other</a> and engage in critical conversations as we learn to critically participate in a digital environment through our <a href="http://www.bigbible.org/aisea/">blogs</a>. the conversation helps us to "see the connections between individual experiences and larger social, cultural, political, economic, and/or technological processes." other members of the community are also welcomed to participate to complement the already cross-cultural class.</li><li>the students are in the process of setting up hypertext resources for biblical studies as part of our course work assessment. </li></ul><p> </p><p>All these aimed at increasing our knowledge and participation in the new scholarship especially being able to "judge online resources critically and incorporate these materials into their research in ways that go beyond merely cutting and pasting text." Our lecturer remains the expert as he assess our created resources. </p><p><br /> </p><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-115777563781757427?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1157770277764690252006-09-08T19:24:00.000-07:002006-09-08T19:51:17.773-07:00Future scholarshipReading Anvis Santos <a href="http://www.futureofthebook.org/blog/archives/2006/07/introducing_mediacommons_or_ti.html">"introducing media commons"</a> give me an idea of the purpose of the new scholarship enhanced by the use of internet. In the next three posts, I will be writing on this insights from Santos and others from futureofthebook and some of the contibutions to biblical studies. This post is about general insights.<br /><br /><ul><li><em>It is undeniable that the digital age is here with us. The age is increasingly requiring the opening up of 'former scholarly world' to the scrutiny of the public. While it maybe doing so without the 'experts' themsleves agreeing to it, I believe the future of the book project is an initiative by the scholars to voluntary respond to this challenge before change can change them. </em></li><li><em>Secondly, while digital is becoming the talk of the town, I want to see it as only a particular lense of reading given that it forms its own community. In other words, just like the many hermeneutical lenses within biblical studies, internet scholarship for me targets the community created by the new age. I therefore analyse its contibution as one among other reading and outreach lenses and to some extent as a site of resistance to the traditional form of scholarship- printing press.</em></li></ul><p>Biblical studies has many faces though not clearly distinguishable as such; It has </p><ol><li>common reader- maybe best known as the "congregations" </li><li>pastors- directly in contact with the common reader </li><li>students- who depending on interest may end up joining the pastors </li><li>academics- directly in conctact with the students and in some cases double the role of pastors. </li></ol><p>These categories are not as clear cut as such because of some taking up multiple roles, this is only to give some framework. Whatever the case, Internet scholarship mostly benefits the students and academics (faculty) who aim at "scholarship, service and teaching."<br /></p><p>The academics aim to produce teaching materials for students and materials that make reading of the bible easier for common readers- materials like bible commentaries or on particular bible topics. The students on the other hand continually undertake research via the internet, while the common reader belonging to the internet community browse the web for information or transfomation. - </p><ul><li>The greatest departure point that I see with the new scholarship is it aim of allowing the targeted community to be part of the scholarship from day one of the project "readers will be able to follow the development of an idea from its germination in a blog, though its drafting as an article". This is achieved by "leaving the network open to continual analysis and critique"- This is majorly for the benefit of students and faculty, and even one scholar and other scholar.</li><li>Secondly, it is one way of realizing the dream of opening up communication between the academy and the wider reading public- however as Santos rightly says, this does not go without a challenge. As much as this kind of scholarship is aimed at creating commons, the fact is that there is still the expert and the learner. It is only the interraction that changes. But it needs a rethinking of how these roles would be defined or clealry cut. narrowing the gap between scholarship, service and teaching.- </li><li>Thirdly, the interractive environment allow for many vioces as people all over the world, perspectives and fields post thier critical analysis and views. To the academic, it makes the work rich, full of new ideas and exciting :-)- </li><li>Using tools like hyperlinks, the academic is able to quote from "multi mediated" materials. without too much worry about space- of course there are restrictions such as copyrights but not as much as printing as a lense of reading.</li></ul><p>How does this benefit the students?(-: look out for the next post............</p><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-115777027776469025?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1155889937459788332006-08-18T01:05:00.000-07:002006-08-18T01:32:17.476-07:00Videos they were!I may not know why this was done by <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lsuZZKyiRDU&eurl=">Carey College</a>, but whatever the reason was; I see it as a one way of using Multimedia for evangelism. But i suppose <a href="http://www.bigbible.org/blog/">Tim</a> will be in a good position to tell me why this was done if not for evangelism. Some of the other reasons I can think of meanwhile<br /><br /><ul><li>Yah, finding what tickles the society and using that! The Church will always follow as society leads</li><li>Hey guys Carey Baptist exist- who does not want to be popular anyway</li><li>It is just the in thing so we are not left behind</li><li>and since we know what youtube is and how many people visit the site- we can explain what the Church is all about/ throw in a few apologies- this is a good one.</li></ul><p>Oh God....... I hope I can get away with this</p><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-115588993745978833?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1155806259849730062006-08-17T02:03:00.000-07:002006-08-17T02:17:39.860-07:00Media in Church<div align="center">This is a <a href="http://www.aym.org.nz/media-in-ministry">workshop</a> to look forward to coz " This workshop will help the beginner understand key concepts while challenging the veteran with advanced tips and professional techniques. it will feature a showcase of the latest media resources for ministry development." (<a href="http://www.stjohnscollege.ac.nz/">Village voice</a>, August 17, 2006)</div><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-115580625984973006?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1155447675950961582006-08-12T22:37:00.000-07:002006-08-12T22:51:08.786-07:00A Click awayWhat difference would it make if I had no time to go to Church, just stay home and <a href="http://www.stchads.org.nz/church/home.php?page=40%20Days%20of%20Community">click</a> the <a href="http://sonypictures.com.au/movies/click/index.html">Adam Sandler</a> way! I went to Church though, this is how the digital age is catching up with us. Choose the audio and turn to your neighbor when the preacher says so....!<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-115544767595096158?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1155365039208248352006-08-11T23:18:00.000-07:002006-08-11T23:43:59.223-07:00Broadband-ingI found this a powerful statement for biblical studies from <a href="http://www.shop.com/op/~Religion,_Politics,_Media_in_the_Broadband_Era,-prod-29377064">Bach's book</a>:<br /><ul><li><div align="center"><span style="color:#660000;">"private faith finds very public outlets through the media's appettite for voices and choices" Which are the public faiths?</span></div></li></ul><p align="left">I wonder if we should congratulate the media for contributing to liberation (raising silent voices) and justice; core teaching of many religions or maybe this was not the media's intention anyway. It was a by the way.....</p><p align="left">But one thing for sure, broadband is quickly reducing the gap between the sacred and the secular. does it have to take more of the<a href="http://www.thepassionofthechrist.com/splash.htm"> </a><em><a href="http://www.thepassionofthechrist.com/splash.htm">passion of Christ</a>, <a href="http://www.sonypictures.com/movies/thedavincicode/">Da Vinci Code</a> </em>and the like to realize the 2 are bedmates? It is amazing though how quickly the flames caused by the struggle cease........ maybe it is characteristic of Broadband culture ".... starvation in Haiti holds us in sway for a day or two and then dissolves into a basketball star's run-in with the law......." Thats how quickly it goes</p><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-115536503920824835?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1155363375921764022006-08-11T22:41:00.000-07:002006-08-11T23:17:59.146-07:00Close listeningI'm reading this article on <strong>close listening</strong>, cant help to notice and take seriously the issues raised by Gutenberg. It is about <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_book">audio books</a>. The kind that you can listen to sitting, sleeping, eating and doing so many other things that we do. He raises some quetsions I'm exploring at the end of the article<br /><br /><ul><li>is listening to books an extension of reading or just another way of turning everything into entertainament</li><li>change the medium and change the message?</li></ul><p align="center"><em>imagine a dramatized audio version of a biblical book like Numbers, Joshua (<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_book">unabridged</a>)</em> <em>especially when the Israelites declare 'War against other nations'. word for word, I bet it will sound more like 'Troy' without pictures! i wonder if after the listening the listeners would still say it is the 'word of God' like we do when read from the lectionaries.</em></p><ul><li>in a case of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_book">abridged</a>, is there space for the listener's reflection or it is aimed at being caught into another's imagination?</li><li>i read my printed bible and i pause at will, speed or stop reading, what happens with the audio, go with the reader's pace, rythms- in other words, is it non collaborative?</li></ul><p>or maybe it is <a href="http://www.netlingo.com/lookup.cfm?term=BCOZ">BCOZ</a> we listen with the print in mind............. looking forward to exploring these concerns......... more <a href="http://www.netlingo.com/lookup.cfm?term=411">411</a> later</p><p align="center"><span style="font-family:verdana;">While exploring blogs, I met a <em>pizza hut </em>link on a blog..... so gone!</span></p><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-115536337592176402?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1154573218113317492006-08-02T19:14:00.000-07:002006-08-04T04:19:42.596-07:00Socializing the bible...!It is interesting to be sitting here, writing and reading articles from print books for my next class. Knu wat, I had to photocopy the pages (no plagarism though- just to let you see the dilema). reading the conversation btwn <a href="http://www.futureofthebook.org/blog/archives/2006/07/network_v_multimedia.html">multimedia and network</a> , i cant help but wish this wud have come earlier. No one would bother about photocopies... you see, thats the other side of the story. Where will we take all the copiers...~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<br /><br />nway, to begin with, I think the whole business is 2 much a good idea (whatever that means), first making available resources (books) on public network (internet), and adding audios and videos. To add to it, making sure the readers are able to 'socialize' with the book. It is real transitional from the tradional way of doing things- whereby I add my tiny comments in pencil and when in worse moods by ink besides the printed word or sentences)))))) some of us go to the extreme, you know cancel the printed word and add your own? The point is, the e-book thing is a good idea. But which way should it go Multimedia, <a href="http://www.futureofthebook.org/blog/archives/the_networked_book">networked</a> or <a href="http://www.futureofthebook.org/sophie/SophieIntro.pdf">multimedia networked</a>. But first I draw it to the book I'm much familiar with- BIBLE <a href="http://www.slate.com/id/2141050">(blogging the bible)</a> and other stuff that go with it like commentaries................<br /><br />Take a bible commentary for instance, the way to go about it on the net depends much on the aim/ objective of the whole project. It is good enough to make the bible/commentaries available on the net but much depends on the motive? Is it because it is necessary or because it is the in thing///////Using multi-media, is it because we want to add audios and videos to it or just to make it free on the web? If making it free is the case, then no much difference with the print except for reduced cost mayb.<br /><br />If it is for the purpose of making the book more interractional then the audios, videos are great like in the <a href="http://www.bible.gen.nz/">Amos project</a> but multimedia metworked would be much better. It is not a move away from the other but combining the 2 for a better <a href="http://chronicle.com/colloquy/2006/07/ebook">conversational scholarship</a>. The multimedis bit helps with the pronuonciations, visual parts while the network part enables the interraction between academy, <a href="http://www.futureofthebook.org/blog/archives/2006/07/introducing_mediacommons_or_ti.html">collegues</a> and the public. It allows readers to discuss, quote, make notes, make references and build upon online.<br /><br />the conversation raises issues biblical scholars will have to deal with before we rejoice over the gift of digital culture.<br /><br /><ul><li>How then would we define a book..... for instance if the bible were to be exposed to such networked multimedia, will it be a book enimore?</li><li>Who and how do we define the 'reader', 'author' when everyone seems to be an author and reader at the same time..... I guess these are the gifts! What about the issue of <a href="http://chronicle.com/colloquy/2006/07ebook">authority</a>? i think this is a cool way to look at it...</li><li>in the case of the bible, how would we define preaching- coming from the traditional way of one person doing it as the others speak? The coversation introduced through network makes everyone listen and preach at the same time.</li></ul><p>but one thing for sure is that I think there is not an escape from depending on textual language to conduct interraction or <a href="http://chronicle.com/colloquy/2006/07ebook">'worship at the altars of linear texts'</a> at least for the time being. So that's not a question. We still get our ideas from how a book should look like out of the print culture. Given that we are talking about a ecommentary at least not going to be available in print maybe like <a href="http://www.futureofthebook.org/gamertheory">GAM3R 7H30RY</a>, it is any good to open it up to often anonymous critique? Another thing 4 sure is that silent voices, those kept away by hierarchies, class and status are definiately going to be heard.</p><p>I read the coversation with Bob and the others and these are some of the questions I think biblical studies ought to be begin to answer because digital culture will definately change the way peolple look at them.</p><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-115457321811331749?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1154506923301095922006-08-02T01:02:00.000-07:002006-08-02T02:07:13.616-07:00What the..............................!<a href="http://www.bigbible.org/young/uploaded_images/St."><img style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; CURSOR: hand" alt="" src="http://www.bigbible.org/young/uploaded_images/St." border="0" /></a><br /><a href="http://www.bigbible.org/young/uploaded_images/St."></a><br /><br /><br /><br /><p></p><p>In such a cold weather alot of thinking goes on and in the process one may never escape a journey back to your 'young' days. For instance the first bible verse you ever recited. One of those was <a href="http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-new2?id=RsvProv.sgm&images=images/modeng&amp;data=/texts/english/modeng/parsed&tag=public&amp;part=1&amp;division=div1">Prov 1:7-9</a>, so scary if you intended to disobey.</p><p>Seemingly, the journey continues, if you are a christian- you can see how most churches struggle with putting up a 'youth service', 'youth coordinator' (In most cases... never mind), youth groups and so many youth............. It even becomes worse when so much money is put into such programmes. But thats fine, 3/4 will come as long there are camps, outings and those soughts of things, but when time comes for bible study, preaching, be sure in most cases another 3/4 will make use of the door, if not literally- mentally or psychologically. Why? Cant help thinking about this, wont blame you if you are drawn into it. How many people aged 19-29 do we have in high ranking Church positions and committies? You know like Bishops (Oops, I was wasnt thinking of that!), Ordained priests... and the list goes on and on. If they are half of the total of the 'not so young', thats a Church to emulate.</p><p>Cant help sharing some of the issues and questions I have read on this <a href="http://christianblogs.christianet.com/">site</a></p><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-115450692330109592?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1153990435350365462006-07-27T01:50:00.000-07:002006-07-27T20:41:27.870-07:00Reading the bible<p align="center"><a href="http://www.bigbible.org/young/uploaded_images/Bible-782795.JPG"><img style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 312px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 216px" height="214" alt="" src="http://www.bigbible.org/young/uploaded_images/Bible-775157.JPG" width="320" border="0" /></a></p><br />I speak about reading the bible in more general terms at this stage and hope soon I will start to focus on particular passages. The urge to look for such texts is furthered by comments such as how <a href="http://www.youthspecialties.com/articles/topics/theology/awaken.php">boring the bible</a>(the bible as a positive book) can be. But first, just a bit of a background of what reading means to me.<br /><br />I presided over a service today and though I was to give direction I found it hard to choose which side I was having listened to the gospel reading. It was hard to choose to be either Martha or Mary as many of us have grown up to choose (Luke 10: 38-42). To say the truth, I like the roles all of them play- busy running around and just sitting to listen- who would not. It is quite tempting for me to choose to be both but again I thought that is not being a 'good Christian'! I have to make my choice sometime though.<br /><br />My choice will be influenced greatly by my final destination which I call home. For many there may not be a difference between home and house but from this location it is vital. When I go back home- I go back to my connectedness, my land, my people and all that it entails. Home is there to stay, it exists whether I exist or not, it is about belonging and identity. House on the other hand is temporary- a place where I stay meanwhile, I may not care so much what happens here as long as I’m in control and I can get what I want as I await going back home. At home, everyone who identifies with this land come and find a meeting point. Not that we are the same, but this place unites us in our diversity. Home is our space where we meet the sacred; so sacred while so secular that no one dare interferes with it. None would though coz for them to enter this space; we always find something to connect us.<br /><br />I will have to admit however that often house takes over home and I ask why. I have lately been looking at some of the possibilities towards answering these questions. For illustration purposes, I have lived to participate in those Churches with ‘special seats’. The seats can stay empty for the whole year especially if the program of 'the office' could not allow. Yah, the bishop’s seat or any related name depending on your religious location. Maybe I'm beginning too far what about our own homes? Ever seen/heard of that special seat in the house where the ‘owner of the house’ sits? Now, I’m not saying the seats are bad but some questions need to be answered. Who determines who sit on that seat and for what purpose? When the other occupants start to hide and curse every minute the 'owner' is around, then there is a need to go back and examine the seat- the supposed facilitator of the house. When the seat directly or indirectly dictates whether I choose to be home or in a house then it bothers.<br /><br />When I will be able to not leave home for a house or long to go back home, then I will have made my choice in Luke 10: 38-42. But I can not read alone, knowing how others read contributes to my going home.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-115399043535036546?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31665517.post-1153876679610130382006-07-25T18:06:00.000-07:002006-07-26T01:04:57.136-07:00Connecting to the connected<div align="justify">I connect to the connected as a young woman, multi cultured and from different locations defined by history, background and relationships among others. Bearing in mind all the above my reading is basically influenced by the small voice that remembers the words of Archbishop Tutu that often in our readings we give answers to questions no one may be asking. Is it possible to give relevant answers? To grow in faith for me is to allow the bible to dialogue with our locations. But when the bible starts to reinforce 'always the victim' attitude, then I get suspicious- something must be wrong somewhere and thats marks the beginning of my connection.<br /><br />We can either be 'the minstered to', 'the minister' or both depending on who sat/is sitting at the mercy seat! How lovely would it be if we became both! I read the bible to be both.</div><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31665517-115387667961013038?l=bigbible.org%2Fyoung%2Findex.php'/></div>Irene Jnoreply@blogger.com4