The article discusses the rise and fall of the National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) initiative, which was founded in 1999 by a group of college students. The original idea was to encourage people to write 50,000 words in the month of November, with the goal of establishing a writing habit.
The article provides some background on the founding of NaNoWriMo, noting that the reasons for the 50,000-word target and the November timeline were somewhat arbitrary. The founder, Chris Baty, even joked that he wanted to be able to tell potential dates that he was a novelist.
Over the years, NaNoWriMo grew in popularity and became a well-known event, with Baty publishing two books related to the initiative. However, the article suggests that in recent years, NaNoWriMo has undergone a corporate takeover, with the organization engaging in "a lot of scrubbing their past recently."
The article implies that this corporate influence has led to the decline of the original spirit of NaNoWriMo, transforming it from a grassroots movement into a more commercialized endeavor. The article does not provide specific details on the nature of this corporate takeover or the changes that have occurred, but it suggests that the initiative has lost its way and is no longer true to its original purpose.
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by Rochelle Dea... 場所 medium.com 09-03-2024
https://medium.com/@rochelledeans/the-rise-and-fall-of-nanowrimo-9ffaffb49ceb深掘り質問