[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

[lojban] fanmo jimte



I know some of us were impressed by fanmo jimte, the Lojban video posted on YouTube.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J_nKJW_KuK4

But we couldn't find who the author was or the motivations for why it was made.

emuzesto posted a link on the IRC revealing all:

11:04:17 <emuzesto> Hmm. I just discovered this on the page of the art gallery                                                                                
        which is located next to the washery where I lived before in Stockholm                                                                                
        (actually in the washery). Evidently, the fanmo jimte movies are made                                                                                 
        by a swedish artist and displayed there. I probably need to take the                                                                                  
        metro there to see it.
11:04:24 <emuzesto> http://www.konsthallc.se/SV/obj632433/default.aspx
11:04:36 <emuzesto> But this you probably knew already.

Quote from the page:

Lina Persson: Fanmo jimte (2008)

The town of Vulcan in Alberta, Canada was established as a farming community during the expansion of the Canadian Pacific Railroad in the beginning of the 20th century. The town’s symbol was nine silos which rose majestically over the flat landscape. In the 1960s

conditions for agriculture deteriorated, farming became unprofitable for economic and climate reasons. The nine silos – “9 in line” – had become a collective symbol of hard work and industry, but burned down in 1971. During this time of recession for Vulcan, another Vulcan arose in the world of fiction: the planet Vulcan in Star Trek. The series, which began in 1966, is one of the greatest and most long-lived successes in television history and has generated a world-wide devoted fan culture. Early on, Star Trek fans began to make pilgrimages to Vulcan in Canada to express their devotion. Later on, the town embraced this linguistic mix and tried to exploit it to attract tourists. In 2003 a sculpture was made representing the Star Trek ship Enterprise which became the symbolic as well as real replacement of “9 in line” and marked a new era.

In the film the story of Vulcan is told in Lojban, a language that has been created by linguists and technologists and absorbed by the Star Trek culture. Lojban and the example of Vulcan show how Star Trek fiction functions as a media text that shapes reality at the same time as it is taken over and extended by a group of consumers inventing their own social culture.

Lina Persson talks about her film on Vulcan as a semiotic monument. The monument is recreated in the film through combining different levels of reality, though a fusion of material from documents, archives and scenarios. Uploaded on Youtube, the film generates constant comments on Lojban and has become a part of fan culture. In the centre of the story is the farmer Nora, who has been hit by crop failure and shadowed by apocalyptic reports. Nora experiences a transformation into an alien.

Glad to have that cleared up.