diary

Description (in English)

The blog Ihpil: Láhppon mánáid bestejeaddji was presented as the genuine diary of a 19-year-old, lesbian Sámi girl studying in Tromsø, using the pseudonym Ihpil. The blog starts on her first day as a student in August 2007, and lasts until she drowns in December of that year. Later the blog was published as a print book. In 2010, a journalist discovered that nobody drowned in Tromsø harbour that day, and Sigbjørn Skåden revealed himself to be the author, claiming that he had always intended to do so at some point (see NRK 4 Feb 2011). 

By Juan Manuel Al…, 17 October, 2017
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Abstract (in English)

Recorded by Joseph Tabbi. A week in the life of the artist. 

(ebr)

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Walid Raad's The Atlas Group Archive (1989-2004) is a transmedial, fictional 'archive' which supposedly encompasses donated testimonies on the war in Lebanon (1974-1991), including diary logs, photographs (some of which contain notes), and videos, archived on theatlasgroup.org. Apart from being published on the website, Raad's project has been exhibited in different galleries around the world.

By Hannah Ackermans, 29 November, 2016
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Abstract (in English)

Walid Raad's The Atlas Group Archive (1989-2004) is a transmedial, fictional 'archive' which supposedly encompasses donated testimonies on the war in Lebanon (1974-1991), including diary logs, photographs (some of which contain notes), and videos, archived on theatlasgroup.org. In this case, the fictionality of the archive creates an archive where no real archive exists. The entire archive is transmedially constructed, in which the layering of content in each image becomes the key feature. There is, for example, a document named "Let's be honest the weather helped" (1998) contains a series of black-and-white images of buildings with colored dots on them, which supposedly signify various types of bullet hits (see fig. 1). The dots cover the whole area of bullet impact, so this media filter makes it impossible to verify if there were indeed bullet hits, and let alone which color the bullet tips were. The transmediality of the project is thus a means in conveying the impossibility of an archive and the unrepresentability of trauma. Medial borders are crossed through layering of content, reinforcing and destabilizing the truth value of testimony. Apart from being published on the website, Raad's project has been exhibited in different galleries around the world.

The Atlas Group Archive can be seen as an instance of 'traveling memory' (Erll), a term to describe the dynamics of commemoration in the current age of globalization. Analyzing The Atlas Group Archive as an instance of traveling memory, I argue that the internal and external institutional context of the archive largely influences its ability to become a traveling memory which "has brought forth global media cultures" (Erll). I compare the effects of the different interfaces in which this work has appeared. Apart from being published on a website, Raad's project has been exhibited in art galleries around the world. Academics have often pointed to the ways in which The Atlas Group Archive plays with the blurring of fact and fiction. I take this observation to the next level by reframing it as the engagement with decontextualisation and recontextualisation. In my analysis, each context becomes an integral part of the images, a layer of content providing meaning. In the online archive, the images function as an icon of the material notebook, and the black background of the images functions as an index, signifying that the images are uncropped and therefore authentic . In the context presentation of the exhibition, however, these images function as icons and index primarily to show that absence of their referentiality. The notebook does not exist and the black background is part of the artwork. I analyze the project's narrative function's using Manovich's criteria for narrativity in databases: the distinction between 'text', 'story', and 'fabula'. Though highly transmedial and fragmented, The Atlas Group Archive accommodates to this model, as it uses multimedia (a 'text' across media borders) to narrate the Lebanese war ('story'), colored by narration of events experienced by actors ('fabula'), and together these three elements form an archival format. According to Benjamin, the opposition between information and storytelling resides in the fact that "while the [storyteller] was inclined to borrow from the miraculous, it is indispensable for information to sound plausible" (101). In the case of The Atlas Group Archive, we might say that these two categories are combined. The fabula is miraculous, but the contextualisation of text and story into information makes the unity plausible. The Atlas Group Archive's narrative functions by the virtue of fragmentation, which becomes an integral part of the content: it fills gaps while at the same time creating them.

(source: author's abstract)

Creative Works referenced
Description (in English)

The Computer Wore Heels is an interactive book app for the iPad that shares the little known story of a group of female mathematicians, some as young as 18, who did secret ballistics research for the US Army during WWII. A handful of these human 'computers' went on to serve as the programmers of ENIAC, the first multi-purpose electronic computer. The app is based on the documentary film Top Secret Rosies: The Female Computers of WWII (LeAnn Erickson 2010), and aims to bring this story to younger students in the hopes of giving today's teens role models that might encourage them to study math, science and computer science. The app's design resembles a girl's diary from the 1940's with the narrative unfolding as an adventure story. Readers may access primary research documents such as original WWII era letters, photographs and mathematical equations actually completed by the story's subjects. There are also numerous audio and video clips that expand on story plot points or events.

(source: Kid e-Lit booklet)

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Description (in English)

Trincheras de Mequinenza by Félix Remírez (2007) is an epistolary diary of a Republican soldier during the Ebro War. The work includes multimedia elements -photographies of real facts and landscapes were the conflict took place and songs from that period-and multi-windows in which historical descriptions of facts and biographies of the most important people in the battle appear.

Description (in original language)

Trincheras de Mequinenza de Félix Remírez (2007) es el diario epistolar de un soldado republicano durante la batalla del Ebro. La obra aúna el texto con elementos multimedia (fotografías de hechos reales y paisajes donde se desarrolló el enfrentamiento así como canciones de la época) y multi-ventanas en las que van apareciendo descripciones históricas de los hechos y biografías de las personas más relevantes de la batalla.

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Nada tiene sentido (Nothing makes sense) by Isabel Ara and Iñaki Lorenzo is a digital diary whose narrator is desperate because he cannot get out of his bedroom, the only thing he can do is typing how he feels on his computer. Once we are reading and watching this autobiography we realize that we are reading the reflections of a schizophrenic person that finishes by losing the logical word order and whose identity is fragmented until it dissolves itself into the virtual space. ("Literatura digital en español" de Dolores Romero López) (http://www.mcu.es/lectura/pdf/v11_dolores_romero.pdf)

Description (in original language)

Nada tiene sentido es un diario digital de un narrador que está desesperado porque no puede salir de su habitación, lo único que puede hacer es escribir cómo se siente en la pantalla de su ordenador. A medida que leemos y observamos esta autobiografía nos damos cuenta que estamos leyendo las reflexiones de un esquizofrénico que termina perdiendo el orden lógico de las palabras y cuya identidad se ve fragmentada hasta disolverse en el espacio virtual. ("Literatura digital en español" de Dolores Romero López) (http://www.mcu.es/lectura/pdf/v11_dolores_romero.pdf)

Description in original language
Description (in English)

Bubbleboy project was conceived to be made from 100 posts, during 100 consecutive days. I established, in a oulipian constraint, that every post would consist of a random image, found in the images search tool,and a brief text related to it. El Diario del Niño Burbuja was made as a text in process, without any pre-established plot or direction. Fragile and insconstant, Bubble, is in a continous endangered disappearance. Like bubbles floating in a hyperspace through multiple dimensions, Bubbleboy inhabits cyberspace, a place that suggests a new spatiality, temporality without any accurate order or causal linearity.

(Written by the author, Belén Gache, published in belengache.net, translated by Maya Zalbidea)

Description (in original language)

El proyecto Bubbleboy fue concebido para ser realizado a partir de 100 posts, durante cien días consecutivos. Establecí, a manera de constraint oulipiano, que cada post constaría de una imagen al azar, encontrada en un buscador de imágenes y de un texto breve que de alguna manera se relacionara con la misma. El Diario del Niño Burbuja se constituyó como un texto a la deriva y en proceso, sin una trama o dirección preestablecida. Frágil e inconstante, Burbuja, está en continua amenaza de desaparición. Al igual que las burbujas flotan en un hiperespacio constituido por múltiples dimensiones, Bubbleboy habita el ciberespacio, lugar igualmente multidimensional que propone una nueva espacialidad y una nueva temporalidad sin órdenes lineales o causales precisos.

(Escrito por la autora, Belén Gache, publicado en belengache.net)

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Description (in English)

This is a stub-entry. A description on the work was written for the Electronic Literature Directory.