Jaakko Stenros and Markus Montola are putting together a book showing the different forms and styles of Nordic larps in texts and photographs. This document is a call for proposals on games that should be included in the book. While the texts themselves will be rather brief, all cases must be also presented with a number of quality images. The papers will be selected in an editorial process, based on abstracts or samples.
During the recent 10 or 15 years, a number of great larps have been organized in the Nordic countries, in and around the Knutpunk community. Unfortunately, only very few of those have been documented in any proper fashion. In an effort to correct the problem, Stenros and Montola are editing a book focusing solely on documenting larps; their innovations, designs, significance and expressive power. This book will be a celebration of the unpaid effort and creative work that has been put into building the Nordic tradition of larp.
The plan is to publish a high quality coffee table book. Larpers are the focus audience, but they hope to also gain the attention of people in theatre, visual arts, street art, game research and game design. Thus, the book should be self-explanatory, readable, intelligent and ambitious. The book will include approximately 20-25 case descriptions, selected with numerous criteria:
- Spectrum. The book should be representative of the different sides of Nordic larp.
- Photographs. The book needs photographs of sufficient quality (technical, aesthetic, journalistic).
- Impact. The significance of the game within the scene either as having impact on the scene or as having been influenced by the scene.
- Description and analysis. The quality of the proposed text about the game.
The first criterion is the most important. In practice, we will use “soft quotas” in the process: If the book has one Vampire proposal and five fantasy proposals, it is a reason for favoring the Vampire. Similarly, the book will have soft quotas for countries and organizer groups.
In a Knutepunkt 2009 workshop Stenros and Montola compiled a wish list for games they would like to include, in order to form an understanding on what the book should be like. The list can be found from the blog http://nordiclarp.wordpress.com/. In an ideal world, they’d include all those games, but all proposals are welcome.
They will look for funding from cultural grants. In addition, there is a contingency plan of possibly looking for a commercial photography book publisher for the book.
Editorial Process
The editors will both ask specific people to contribute descriptions of certain projects, and accept open submissions. Expression on willingness to contribute on a game can be expressed immediately. Papers are selected based on abstracts or representative samples of 500+ words and a few full-resolution images, with an editorial review. The editors need to have the first abstracts by September 20th, 2009. The selections will be made during the end of September and the submitters will hear back from the editors in the beginning of October. Final deadline, including photographs and relevant permissions, is November 15th, 2009.
The editors will provide feedback in all phases of the work, consulting external experts if needed. You should expect around two-three rounds of feedback on the text, one based on abstract and another based on full paper. The editors will provide help and guidance in the process.
The length of the papers is 1500-2000 words, plus captions and references. In addition, there will be fact boxes including credits, number of players and so on. In addition, the authors should submit 6-15 images with captions, out of which approximately 5-10 will be included.
The authors are responsible of procuring the photographs, and all the necessary permissions from copyright holders and people shown in the images. The editors may be able to help in the process. Submissions should follow the style guide available at http://nordiclarp.wordpress.com.
Production Crew
The book is edited by Jaakko Stenros and Markus Montola. It is produced by Anna Westerling and Anders Hultman. In addition, they have enlisted a number of country contacts, including Bjarke Pedersen (of
Denmark) and Eirik Fatland (of Norway). With photography, they will consult Britta Bergersen and Katri Lassila. They are still looking for a graphic designer.
More information: http://nordiclarp.wordpress.com
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