dc.contributor.author | Kaare, Birgit Hertzberg | |
dc.contributor.editor | Carlsson, Ulla | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2014-11-14T12:54:16Z | |
dc.date.available | 2014-11-14T12:54:16Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2012-12 | |
dc.identifier.citation | Nordicom Review 33 (2012) 2, pp. 17-26 | sv |
dc.identifier.isbn | 978-91-86523-57-2 | |
dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/2077/37407 | |
dc.description.abstract | Media researchers have not been much preoccupied with a genre named Digital Storytell
-
ing. Since its origin in the early 90s, it has spread from California to the rest of the United
States and has been evolving for several years now as a media practice around the globe. I
therefore want to draw more attention to digital storytelling, here understood as a specific
genre developed at the Center for Digital Storytelling (CDS) in California and defined as a
short, first-person video narrative that combines voice recordings, still and moving images,
and music or other sounds (www.storycenter.org). Such storytelling is regarded as both a
movement and a method; and it is in its idea a short personal story, about the self. In the
subtitle of his book
Digital Storytelling
, the leader of the center, Joe Lambert, highlights
that this type of narratives are
Creating Community
through
Capturing Lives
of individuals
(Lambert 2009). This genre is embedded in a democratic and empowering ideology. Along
these lines, the main concern of this article is to discuss whether a change can be observed
in the digital storytelling genre from an individualistic perspective to a more collective
perspective – a shift from narrating selves to narrating communities. In examining this
question, this work draws upon 45 films produced by bachelor students at the University
of Oslo in 2010 and 2011. | sv |
dc.format.extent | 10 | sv |
dc.language.iso | eng | sv |
dc.publisher | Nordic Council of Ministers, Nordicom | sv |
dc.subject | digital storytelling | sv |
dc.subject | narratives | sv |
dc.subject | individual and collective | sv |
dc.subject | identity | sv |
dc.title | The Self and the Institution The Transformation of a Narrative Genre | sv |
dc.type | Text | sv |
dc.type.svep | article, peer reviewed scientific | sv |