Official Creative Task of the Week #3
Last week we have dealt with character profiles for characters that already exist. This week we build on exactly this task by using your knowledge about how to create fictional characters to create a new fictional one. This character can be entirely your own creation, for example created for a story you’ve already written or a character that you’re just inventing – or – if that’s too difficult – you can vaguely base it on a classic fictional character from Lady Macbeth to Sherlock Holmes – ... it doesn’t matter as long as the character is unique and yours, with it’s own original name.
I am writing small anecdotes these days. Besides this very course I am also doing another course Design 101 in which I receive a video post card and a letter daily. The course instructor is +Stefano Mirti. I started writing with the beginning of these two courses, Homer's odyssey is my inspiration and the content for my daily anecdote is driven from the video post card and the letter which is sent from a new place everyday. Here I have created my own Odysseus which is Captain Stefano Mirti and we are sailing with the help of Athena, goddess of arts and wisdom and Poseidon, god of the seas. You can find my anecdotes here. My writings are the blend of these two dynamic courses. Hopefully you will see better anecdotes with picture illustrations in future.
P.S.
This homework has been done for the +iversity course The Future of Storytelling, StoryMOOC instructed by Prof. +Winfried Gerling, Prof. +Constanze Langer, +Christina Maria Schollerer, and +Julian van Dieken.
Official Creative Task of the Week #3
Last week we have dealt with character profiles for characters that already exist. This week we build on exactly this task by using your knowledge about how to create fictional characters to create a new fictional one. This character can be entirely your own creation, for example created for a story you’ve already written or a character that you’re just inventing – or – if that’s too difficult – you can vaguely base it on a classic fictional character from Lady Macbeth to Sherlock Holmes – ... it doesn’t matter as long as the character is unique and yours, with it’s own original name.
P.S.
This homework has been done for the +iversity course The Future of Storytelling, StoryMOOC instructed by Prof. +Winfried Gerling, Prof. +Constanze Langer, +Christina Maria Schollerer, and +Julian van Dieken.
Comments
Post a Comment