Espen Aarseth
Lua error in Module:Infobox at line 235: malformed pattern (missing ']'). Espen J. Aarseth is a figure in the fields of video game studies and electronic literature.[1] Aarseth was born in Bergen, Norway, in 1965 and completed his doctorate at the Department of Comparative Literature at the University of Bergen. He co-founded the Department of Humanistic Informatics [1][dead link] at the University of Bergen, and worked there until 2003, at which time he was a full professor. He is currently Principal Researcher at the Center for Computer Games Research at the IT University of Copenhagen.[2]
Aarseth's works include groundbreaking Cybertext: Perspectives on Ergodic Literature (Johns Hopkins UP 1997) book, which was originally his doctoral thesis. Cybertext focuses on mechanical organization of texts by placing the medium as a critical part of literary exchanges. The book introduces the concept of ergodic literature, which is a text that requires non-trivial effort to be traversed. The book also contains a well-known (pre-ludological) theory, "typology of cybertext" which allows ergodic texts to be classified by their functional qualities. (In Aarseth's later work with Solveig Smedstad & Lise Sunnanå this typology of cybertext transforms into "a multi-dimensional typology of games".)[3]
Aarseth also wrote an article, "Nonlinearity and Literary Theory", which was published in Hyper/Text/Theory and The New Media Reader. The article discusses the concept behind nonlinear texts, stepping away from the category of hypertext and delving into different types of media which can also be considered nonlinear. He identifies nonlinear texts as objects of verbal communication in which the words or sequence of words may differ from reading to reading. He also outlines the different categories and varieties of nonlinear texts. Additionally, he talks about how writing is more than just signs and symbols. Writing can be broken down into two units which are called textons and scriptons. The essay also discusses hypertext fiction in depth as well as works of interactive fiction, such as Adventure, and MUDs.[4]
Aarseth is now the Editor in Chief of Game Studies,[5] a preeminent ludological journal, and member of the Advisory Board of G|A|M|E,[6] a journal of comparative videogame analysis.
References
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External links
- Game Studies, an international journal co-founded by Aarseth
- G|A|M|E, an international journal for which Aarseth is a scientific advisor
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- ↑ http://gamestudies.org/1103/ed_board Editorial Board for the Game Studies journal
- ↑ http://www.gamejournal.it/about/editorial-board/ Editorial Board for the G|A|M|E journal
- Pages with reference errors
- Articles with hCards
- No local image but image on Wikidata
- Articles with dead external links from April 2013
- 1965 births
- Date of birth missing (living people)
- Game researchers
- Living people
- MUD scholars
- Norwegian media scholars
- People from Bergen
- University of Bergen alumni
- University of Bergen faculty
- IT University of Copenhagen faculty
- Norwegian emigrants to Denmark