For me writing a script is mainly a process of distillation. After generating a 'leave it all on the page' written draft, writing a script involves getting the storyline(s) worked out in a kind of finely honed way.
I am cognizant also that the script will function, at times anyway, as a set of guardrails. For example I have quite a bit of experience writing presentation slideshow content, and I know from that experience that the way I actually speak the content orally when I rehearse it inevitably involves improvisation; the core points remain, but the actual oral delivery changes.
And this is something I anticipate occurring in my digital storytelling project as well. So I figure my script will serve as a place for me to hone the exact narrative I want to tell, then the next stage -- recording and producing the oral narration -- will involve an immersion in semi-improvisational orality. Since digital storytelling is an oral genre, it makes sense that orality sort of gets the last word, so to speak.
I am cognizant also that the script will function, at times anyway, as a set of guardrails. For example I have quite a bit of experience writing presentation slideshow content, and I know from that experience that the way I actually speak the content orally when I rehearse it inevitably involves improvisation; the core points remain, but the actual oral delivery changes.
And this is something I anticipate occurring in my digital storytelling project as well. So I figure my script will serve as a place for me to hone the exact narrative I want to tell, then the next stage -- recording and producing the oral narration -- will involve an immersion in semi-improvisational orality. Since digital storytelling is an oral genre, it makes sense that orality sort of gets the last word, so to speak.
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