Round-robin story
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| - | '''Collaborative fiction''' is a form of [[writing]] by a group of authors who share creative control of a [[Storytelling|story]]. | ||
| - | Collaborative fiction can occur for commercial gain, as part of education, or recreationally - many collaboratively written works have been the subject of a large degree of academic research. | + | A '''round-robin story''', or simply "round robin," is a type of [[collaborative fiction]] or [[storytelling]] in which a number of authors each write chapters of a novel or pieces of a story, in rounds. Round-robin novels were invented in the 19th century, and later became a tradition particularly in [[science fiction]]. In modern usage, the term often applies to collaborative [[fan fiction]], particularly on the [[Internet]], though it can also refer to friends or family telling stories at a [[sleepover]], around a [[campfire]], etc. |
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| - | == See also == | + | |
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| - | * [[Shared universe]], for when authors collaborate in a setting rather than a particular storyline. | + | |
| - | * [[Round-robin story]] | + | |
| - | * [[Collaborative blog]] | + | |
| + | ==See also== | ||
| + | * [[addventure]], which combines the round robin method with [[gamebook]] narrative form | ||
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A round-robin story, or simply "round robin," is a type of collaborative fiction or storytelling in which a number of authors each write chapters of a novel or pieces of a story, in rounds. Round-robin novels were invented in the 19th century, and later became a tradition particularly in science fiction. In modern usage, the term often applies to collaborative fan fiction, particularly on the Internet, though it can also refer to friends or family telling stories at a sleepover, around a campfire, etc.
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See also
- addventure, which combines the round robin method with gamebook narrative form
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