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Julian Novitz

๐Ÿ‘ค Speaker
99 total appearances

Appearances Over Time

Podcast Appearances

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

Hi, thanks for having me.

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

Yes.

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

Okay.

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

Well, I was just recently invited to contribute to a special issue of a journal that was looking at video adaptations of other media and video games.

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

And of course, video games often draw heavily on film for source material and adaptations.

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

And I just had a couple of video game adaptations or

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

or games that drawn Hamlet as a source on my radar at that point, so I thought it would be interesting to write an article about that.

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

And I went back and I found actually from about 1995 onwards about four video games that all adapted or drew upon Hamlet as source material.

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

And I'm just quite interested in how, as interactive narratives, they actually involve changing or manipulating the text and the structure of the narrative, while also depending on players either having or being influenced

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

taught about or taught to have an awareness of the original play.

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

So there's a sense about what's kind of playful or transgressive or enjoyable about changing or transforming the structure of the original narrative.

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

Well, because I had the great opportunity to review Hilary Mantel's latest novel for the Sydney Review of Books, I took that as an opportunity to reread all of the Thomas Cromwell trilogy from scratch.

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

So I've been kind of in a Thomas Cromwell bunker for the last month or so, and it's been brilliant to actually look at how

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

closely interconnected the three novels in that trilogy are wolf hall bring up the bodies and the mirror and the light the extent that i now kind of think of them as one extended almost 2000 page novel as opposed to three semi-independent volumes so that that was absolutely wonderful

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

I've also, as kind of recreational reading, I've been doing a lot of rereading at the moment, not so much reading new texts.

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

But I've been dipping in and out of William Gibson's old cyberpunk novels, the Sprawl trilogy, Neuromancer, Count Zero, and Mona Lisa Overdrive, which still hold up wonderfully today.

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

I'm never โ€“

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

I don't understand the plots of these novels at all.

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

I've tried to read them back and forth so many times and never quite figured out what's going on.

The Bookshelf
History, fiction and plastic surgery

But he writes, he has this wonderful speculative imagination at this point in his career where he can just write visually and tactilely about technology with such spectacular invented language that it can't help but feel convincing and real.

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