Visual Rhetoric 9.2: Book Production Presentation

Today’s plan:

  • Book Production Presentation Details
  • Presentation Zen Guidelines

Book Production Presentation

As I mentioned last class, the final component of our second project is to develop a presentation that “pitches” your book design. The hypothetical scenario here is that you are making a submission for a publishing firm to redesign an existing cover and book. Your presentation should not only focus on what you have designed, but should situate that design within both past book covers *and* popular contemporary covers and design trends.

The article linked above indicates that good pitches concisely tell a story, addressing three “why’s”:

  • Why here?
  • Why now?
  • Why you?

These questions are aimed at authors pitching their written work to specific outlets, but we can adapt them to fit our hypothetical situation:

  • What is out there?
  • What did you do?
  • What should we see?
  • What makes this work special?

Your presentation should use language and terms from our reading and class discussions. Your presentation should be about technical process (what you did, how you did it) and design rationale (why you did it).

Also, you PowerPoint should itself be visually appealing and reflect the design considerations we have discussed this semester, including layout, typography, contrast, and color. Last night’s reading in Presentation Zen should have given some nuts and bolts advice on developing visually beautiful PowerPoints.

I expect each presentation will be five minutes long. You should time and practice your presentation before class. It is quite likely that your career path as a professional writer will involve some measure of public speaking before audiences, so take this as an opportunity to practice.

So, the grading rubric for Project 2 looks something like this:

  • Book Cover:
    • Layout in accordance with White Space, rule of thirds, and/or golden section
    • Color and Contrast help determine focal point, which should *probably* be on the title
    • Typographically appropriate
    • Proper spacing and typography on the back cover and jacket flaps
    • Proper sizing
  • Front Matter:
    • Has title page, table of contents, copyright page w/ proper numbering (including section reset)
    • Typographic design reflects published work
  • Poems:
  • Presentation:
    • Visual design reflects Presentation Zen, including typography and layout
    • Presentation shows adequate market/genre research
    • Presentation is articulate and insightful
    • Presentation is longer than 4 minutes but shorter than 6 minutes

Presentation Zen

For today’s class, I had you read Garr Reynold’s summation of his design principles in the form of a plain .pdf. Today, I want to spend some time talking about these principles, examining them in action, and then asking you to put them into practice.

First, let’s look at a brief description of Reynold’s about putting these design principles into action.

Next, let’s look at a collection of before and after slides. As we work, I want you to write down a list of what you see happening in the before and after.

Finally, I want you to create a short PowerPoint (say 6 slides) that puts Reynolds’ theory into practice. Please turn any section of his .pdf linked above into a PowerPoint.

In making this presentation, you should use copyright-free (or copyleft) images. These are images that are in the public domain. There is a number of resources to help find images in public domain:

Upload these presentations to Canvas.

Homework

Complete Project Two.

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