Scandinavia

Description (in English)

VUMA Soner honours the voices, stories and talent of people of colour in Scandinavia. It is an app created by VUMA Projects with geo-triggered immersive audio experiences. This chapter of the app contains a collection of thoughts, reflections, and conversations, remembered or spontaneous, tied to specific landmarks, buildings and areas in the city of Bergen. The authors are all living in Bergen, some speaking in Norwegian and some in English. The sounds can be accessed in six central locations through a free downloadable app, which can be combined into one long, or multiple small walks. Production of the app is supported by the City of Bergen, the Arts Council of Norway and BEK.

How to access the appTo find the app, go to an app store (Google Play or App Store) on your mobile device. Search for “VUMA Soner” and download it for free. Create an account and select the walk. The audio experiences are linked to GPS locations and will be triggered when you walk into the zone of your selected walk. If your signal is weak in some areas, you can download the walks onto your device beforehand. Just be sure to keep the GPS on.

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Screenshots of the app.
By Eric Dean Rasmussen, 23 March, 2012
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Abstract (in English)

While literary hypertexts and the research field were still in an early stage, Nordic researchers laid their eyes on the literary potential of hypertext technologies. Some Nordic researchers (e.g. Aarseth 1994; Koskimaa 1994; Liestøl 1994), I would claim (perhaps in a moment of patriotism), contributed significantly to a research field still in its infancy. Still, after almost twenty years, it is hard to discover a specifically Nordic community for electronic literature. Those scholars conducting research on electronic literature in the Nordic countries are usually associates of international communities like the Electronic Literature Organization, Digital Fiction International Network and Electronic Literature as a Model of Creativity and Innovation in Practice. Similar communities in the Nordic countries are not that easy to spot, but we might say that they exist, although as rather small-scale projects and communities. This does however not imply that they are insignificant. On the contrary, as this article will show, the communities have been important for distributing and archiving electronic literature in the Nordic countries, for making works available to a broad audience, and for improving the conditions for writing electronic literature in a Nordic language.

(Source: Author's abstract)

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By Jill Walker Rettberg, 27 March, 2011
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Abstract (in English)

An overview of electronic literature in Scandinavia that identifies its most important characteristics and looks at how they mirror the development of international electronic literature. There are also characteristics and analyses of works that have been important for this literary tradition in Scandinavia.

Abstract (in original language)

Artiklen giver en oversigt over elektronisk litteratur i Norden ved at identificere dens vigtigste karaktertræk og se på, hvorledes disse afspejler udviklingen i den internationale elektroniske litteratur. Man får tillige karakteristikker og analyser af værker, som har haft markant betydning for denne litterære tradition i Norden, for eksempel Karl Erik Tallmo’s Iakttagarens förmåga att ingripa, Anne Bang-Steinsvik’s I mellom tiden og Sonja Thomsen’s Ingen elge på vejen den dag.