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6 X 5 Jarrod Jones
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Our Father's Dreams

Mar 13, 2016

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Page 1: Our Father's Dreams

Cover

6X5

Jarrod Jones

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Publication Info“Flash Fiction.” Wikipedia. The Wikimedia Foundation, n.d. Web. 5 April 2012.

“Tell a story in 5 frames (Visual story tell-ing).” Flickr. Yahoo! Inc., n.d. Web. 20 April 2012.

© 2012 Jarrod JonesGrid design, introduction, six-word story de-scription and five-frame story description by Scott Jost. Used by permission.

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Title Page

6X5

Jarrod Jones

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Introduction

Art 220, Introduction to Digital Media, introduces foundation-level ideas, skills, con-cepts, and processes to support development and cultivation of digital media literacy in an art context. Digital media literacy, in this course, includes selecting and using basic digital tools and media appropriate to one’s creative and communicative intent, independently accessing resources needed for self-learning, growth, and change, and preparation for success in intermediate and advanced digitally-based courses in the art department at Bridgewater College.

Introduction

6 x 5: Flash Fiction and Visual Stories, the final project in Art 220, synthe-sizes skills and concepts in digital foundations, typography, and photog-raphy introduced earlier in the course with new concepts including verbal and visual narrative, publication design, and digital publishing.

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6-word Story Intro(May use main column this page or sidebar

columns on this page and next page)

Six-word StoriesFor sale: baby shoes, never worn.

The six-word story form is attributed to Ernest Hemingway, who may or may not have written this story in response to a bet made by writers lunching with him at the Algonquin Hotel. Later, Hemingway supposedly claimed this story as his finest work.

Six-word stories are a category of flash fiction, a group of literary forms characterized by extreme brevity. There is no strict definition of flash fiction, also known as sudden fiction, microfiction, micro-story, postcard fiction and short short story; the terms having been applied to works from six to a thousand words. Flash fiction forms share most story elements (protagonist, conflict, obstacles or complications, and resolu-tion) with more conventional short stories. However, while many of these elements are explicitly treated in conventional short stories, in microfiction they are often sug-gested or implied.

The six-word stories and other flash fiction formats are well suited to participatory online literary spaces, though they are also published in print magazines and col-lections. Contemporary six-word story projects abound, including Six Word Stories launched by producer and videographer Pete Berg in 2008, Smith Magazine’s Six Word Memoirs begun in 2006, and Six Word Story Every Day, a 2010 collabora-tion between designer Anne Ulku and writer Van Horgen. All three projects claim Hemingway’s probably apocryphal six-word story as inspiration.

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6-word Story Design Area

My greatest failure, my greatest experiance.

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One

Two

TwelveDrinks

Good Night

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I am my past, now, always

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5-frame Story Intro(May use main column this page or sidebar

columns on this page and next page)

Five-frame Stories

Five-frame stories are short visual narratives comprised of five sequenced images, usually photographs. Aside from a title, no additional text is used to direct the story’s meaning. Five-frame stories provide a visual corollary to six-word stories.

Like six-word stories, five-frame stories share many elements found in more conventional forms of fiction. The Flickr group Tell a story in five frames (Vi-sual story telling) states, “A good story has characters in action with a begin-ning, middle, and an ending. Fortunately a lot of information can be given in a single photograph, enhancing the limitations of five photographs for your story. Location, time, and atmosphere aid viewer imagination.”

Tell a story in five frames (Visual story telling) was begun in 2004 by Subha-sish Karmakar, an Indian creative director in the interaction design and visual communication fields. While the origins of five-frame stories are uncertain Tell a story in five frames (Visual story telling), with over 11,000 members, is perhaps the form’s most prominent venue.

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First 5-frame Story Page(Story images align with outer edge of pages. Subsequent story images may appear on right and left pages or right pages only.

This page must contain the story’s title.)

Our Father’s Dreams

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