In "Seeing through the Interface:
Computers and the Future of Composition," Nancy Kaplan and Stuart Moulthrop
suggest that emerging forms of writing redefine notions of text and reality.
Indeed, the collaborative nature of the new forms may create a reality that is
socially constructed. One emerging form of composition that shows this social
world building through language takes place in Multiple User Domains, or MUDs.
MUDs are text-based virtual realities. In MUDs words make up worlds; one can
create spaces and objects within them through verbal description.
In composition circles, the notion that writing is an activity of social
construction has been put forth for some time. The emergence of MUDs gives this
idea and Moulthrop and Kaplan's stronger claims about the impact of new forms even more currency.
For more information on MUDs and the social construction of reality, see Anderson on MUDs, Bruckman on gender in MUDs, and Bruckman on MUD programming.
Return to Moulthrop and
Kaplan's advice, to Not Maimed but
Malted, or to the CWRL home page.