First, you must clearly identify your focus group. The group you choose might be: – other students are looking for less traditional readings on the notion of a document in the 21st cent
INSTRUCTION:
1. First, you must clearly identify your focus group. The group you choose
might be:
– other students are looking for less traditional readings on the notion of a
document in the 21st century.
– a group of Ph.D. students with various backgrounds who want to come up to
speed on cutting-edge thinking in information science.
– a set of undergraduate or high school students who want to see if information
science is more than making indexes and library catalogs.
These are just examples. You can identify any group you’d like.
2. With your potential readers in mind, you want to give them an idea of why, out of
all the articles available these days, the three articles you have chosen are most
worth their time. So, you should write:
– A one-sentence description of your user group at the beginning
– A very summary (one or two sentences at the most) of each article
– What is novel or intriguing about the article?
– Is it an easy/interesting read for non-specialists or a little hard but worth it?
– How does this fit in with the background knowledge of your assumed seekers
– or how does it fit with what you learned in this course?
– what are the author's credentials – for some, you may only be able to find
what school or organization is their home, others are likely to be famous in
the field – dig a little bit, but not obsessively.
– Follow APA 7th edition for in-text citations and references.
One page should be adequate for each article – so three pages of content is what is
expected.
The University of Akron IdeaExchange@UAkron
Proceedings from the Document Academy University of Akron Press Managed
June 2017
The Art of Radio Documentary Geir Grenersen Department of Culture and Literature. The Arctic University of Norway. Tromsø, Norway, [email protected]
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Part of the European History Commons, Other Film and Media Studies Commons, and the Scandinavian Studies Commons
This Article is brought to you for free and open access by University of Akron Press Managed at IdeaExchange@UAkron, the institutional repository of The University of Akron in Akron, Ohio, USA. It has been accepted for inclusion in Proceedings from the Document Academy by an authorized administrator of IdeaExchange@UAkron. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected].
Recommended Citation Grenersen, Geir (2017) "The Art of Radio Documentary," Proceedings from the Document Academy: Vol. 4 : Iss. 1 , Article 7. DOI: https://doi.org/10.35492/docam/4/1/7 Available at: https://ideaexchange.uakron.edu/docam/vol4/iss1/7
If we had moved to Oslo,
we wouldn't have lasted for many days…
For many years, I have been a devoted fan of radio documentaries. Back in the
1980s and 1990s I used to record some of the documentaries on my old Phillips
cassette recorder. When digital technology replaced such tapes, I put them in a
drawer. To make a radio documentary, you only need a good voice recorder and
a talent to connect with people. Listening to a good radio documentary, you get
the feeling of participating in the scenes that the journalist has recorded on tape.
The story unfolds before you, rich with character and detail, as people present
their lives “unfiltered,” without the usual interjections from experts.
In the early 1990s, the famed Norwegian journalist Birger Amundsen
visited Nordmandset, a small Sámi fishing village in the western part of
Finnmark County, in Northern Norway. At its height in the early 1960s, about
40–50 people lived in this village. Thirty years later, two brothers in their late
50s were the only people left. The authorities saw no future for the small fishing
hamlets along the endless Norwegian coastline. The fishing fleet was
modernized, and fishermen started using larger boats and delivering their stock
to larger villages. Women entered the workforce and got paying jobs, and the
educational system gave free access for people of all backgrounds to pursue
higher education. For many small hamlets, this meant that the young people
moved away, especially women, and they never moved back.
In an effort to document a vanishing culture, Birger Amundsen – himself
from Kjøllefjord, a fishing village in Finnmark not far from Nordmandset –
made a radio documentary in Nordmandset about its two last inhabitants: the
brothers Eilert and Hans Karlsen. The documentary was titled Ikke langt fra
veien: “not far from the road.” It was broadcast in 1992 by the Norwegian
Broadcasting Cooperation (NRK). I have listened to this particular documentary
now and again over the years, always amazed by the way the brothers relate to
the tough nature surrounding them, and the way they talk about how to handle
their sjark – a traditional fishing boat, 18–28 feet long with a diesel motor – in
stormy weather. They lived their whole life fishing at the edge of the Barents
Sea, among the roughest waters in the world. In recent years, Hans had been
fishing alone while Eilert looked after everything on land – the pier, the pier-
house and the general store (only open in the summertime, when the people that
moved away, along with tourists, come for vacation). Eilert also delivered the
mail, when needed.
In this documentary, Amundsen gives us some background information.
He tells us that Eilert and Hans are Sea-Sámi, and that they have lived at
Nordmanset all their lives. Their world is this little, vacated fishing hamlet and
the fjords and peninsula surrounding it. They have grown into this landscape.
“It’s good medicine to live in a place like this,” one of them says. Eilert had
visited the capital Oslo once, 25 years before, and concluded, “If we had moved
to Oslo, we wouldn't have lasted for many days.” Hans had visited the nearest
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village Hammerfest twice (300km away), the last time as an emergency trip to
the main county hospital. “My first visit to a hospital, and I was in my fifties.”
Hans shows Amundsen his small house, and his newly bought 28-inch
colour television, and suggests they sit down in the living room for a coffee,
since it is warmer there. But Amundsen asks if they could sit in the kitchen, by
the window, because there they can look – Hans quickly cuts him off. They’re
both aware of the same thing: The best conversations happen in the kitchen,
sitting on each side of the table by the window. Amundsen knows that being by
the kitchen window is of the utmost importance to get a smooth conversation.
Coffee is put on the kettle, cups put on the table, the radio plays country
western music in the background, interrupted from time to time with weather
reports and regional news. From the kitchen, you can look out at the harbor and
landscape while talking, drinking coffee and taking long pauses. The kitchen is
the central place in the house in these fishing hamlets. Through the kitchen
window, with small, light curtains, you “check the weather”: how the waves on
the fjord look, the direction of the wind, the way the sea gulls are behaving and
so on – information that is vital for the fishermen with small boats.
Looking through the kitchen window, Hans will feel that it is his
landscape – both inner and outer – that is of importance. He is proud of their
way of living. “We don't make demands; we are used to fending for ourselves.”
Hans Karlsen talks about all the people that have moved, both those who have
“moved to the other side” (died) and the ones that have moved out of the village.
“The people that used to live here, they have passed away over time, and you
know where the final resting place is… And you know, when the youth don't
stay, the villages die.” We notice Amundsen’s deep understanding of the
worldview of the two brothers, and how a conversation is meant to play out: a
mix of serious talk and humorous understatements. Hans offers a little glass of
vodka (or maybe it’s moonshine – it’s called “coffee doctor” in the rural parts
of Northern Norway), emphasizing that he only offers this to special guests.
You can hear the liquor being poured into the coffee, and the sound of cups
hitting the saucer, giving you as the listener a feeling of sitting at the table with
them. Hans tells Amundsen that he can “see,” that he is a bit clairvoyant. “It
was years ago I was aware of it. I don’t tell it to everyone. It happens when you
live in a place like this.” In the next sentence, Hans jokes about how he serves
coffee doctors to real doctors that visit Nordmanvik as tourists, and they have a
good laugh about it.
Hans asks Amundsen if he believes in God. Amundsen does not answer,
but returns the question. Hans answers “I don’t know. I can’t say frankly that
there is God, but there is something… Maybe there is someone who has created
all this. But it is man who has written the Bible, and it is man who is so clever
and has created all these weapons.”
The conversation turns to death and the dangers of fishing from small
vessels in these waters. Many fishermen lose their lives each year in Northern
Norway. It is especially dangerous to fish from small boats. A weather
phenomenon called polare lavtrykk (polar low pressure) hits these coasts
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Proceedings from the Document Academy, Vol. 4 [2017], Iss. 1, Art. 7
https://ideaexchange.uakron.edu/docam/vol4/iss1/7 DOI: 10.35492/docam/4/1/7
regularly with great force. They build up in very short time, and is difficult both
for experienced fishermen to predict and for the meteorologists to forecast. Hans
believes that the time of each person’s death is already decided, a view common
in Læstadianismen, a pietistic religious movement influenced by traditional
shamanistic Sámi religion. “It is not written down when you are supposed to
die, but the time is decided. You don’t go before your time has come.” God –
or what he calls “something” – decides when you are supposed “to go,” but your
own skills keep you alive until the hour comes.
Hans connects his thoughts about life and death to his seamanship. “For
many years, I have been fishing alone from my boat. Other fishermen ask me
why I fish alone, but I can’t wait years for a companion. When you don’t have
someone else on board, you must be observant.” Hans gives Amundsen his
précis on how to manage alone in a small boat when storm comes: “It’s up to
you. You don’t need to be strong, but you must be observant. It’s the sea that
teaches you; you must obey the sea, not steer randomly. It is a small boat, and
the waves are huge. Not long ago I was fishing, and an unexpected storm came
from northeast. I was not afraid. I knew I was going to manage, even though the
waves were 4–5 meters high, huge waves for a small boat. You must know when
to back up – to stop, to look – look at the sea, go carefully. We learned this as
boys. We had to be observant. You don’t learn this at school, not even at the
nautical college. They only teach you how to navigate by instruments. And
that’s fine, but they don’t know this… You know, these small boats don’t have
instruments. I don’t need radar. I am used to managing without.”
Hans talks with great authority on how to steer his small boat in heavy
storms. He is proud of his seamanship. He remarks again that you don’t learn
this in school. “I have only a few weeks of schooling. The war came and I got
some weeks at school when I was ten years old. Those who do not attend school,
get more in return – they get to know much more.” His best teacher is the sea
itself: “It’s the sea that teaches you.” In lieu of formal schooling, Hans has been
educated through thousands of hours at sea, in all weather, in his small boat.
In a passage towards the end of the documentary, the brothers are
discussing the weather and how to move the boat out of the mooring because of
ice that is forming in the harbor, when they suddenly change from their rather
broken Norwegian to Sámi. They talk unstrained in Sámi and they seem to
forget the journalist and his microphone. Their use of the old Sea-Sámi
language, hardly spoken by any people these days, reminds us that Eilert and
Hans in Nordmanvik are some of the last people left of an old and vanishing
culture. A “people without a past” as they often are called, with reference to the
nearly total neglect in Norway for this part of the Sámi population.
After listening four or five times to the documentary, my old cassette
player nearly breaks down. The voices of Hans and Eilert are distorted and slow,
hardly recognizable. At NRK’s homepage, I read in an article (dated 2001) that
Hans died in 1998, 63 years old, and that Eilert now lives, or then lived, in a
municipal center in the winter, but come spring moves back to Nordmanvik,
where he spends the summer.
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Bibliography
Amundsen, Birger (1992) Ikke langt fra veien. Radio Documentary, Norwegian
Broadcasting Cooperation (not available online).
Nielsen, Reidar (1986) Folk uten fortid. Gyldendal: Oslo.
NRK (2001) Ikke langt fra veien. Eilert og Hans Karlsen. Retrieved from
https://www.nrk.no/kultur/ikke-langt-fra-veien-1.1458402
Smith, Stephen (2001, September 15) ‘What the Hell is a Radio Documentary?’
NiemanReports. Retrieved from http://niemanreports.org/articles/what-
the-hell-is-a-radio-documentary/
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Proceedings from the Document Academy, Vol. 4 [2017], Iss. 1, Art. 7
https://ideaexchange.uakron.edu/docam/vol4/iss1/7 DOI: 10.35492/docam/4/1/7
- The University of Akron
- IdeaExchange@UAkron
- June 2017
- The Art of Radio Documentary
- Geir Grenersen
- Recommended Citation
- tmp.1496860513.pdf.iJXV7
,
The University of Akron IdeaExchange@UAkron
Proceedings from the Document Academy University of Akron Press Managed
June 2016
Documents and Time Tim Gorichanaz Drexel University, [email protected]
Please take a moment to share how this work helps you through this survey. Your feedback will be important as we plan further development of our repository. Follow this and additional works at: https://ideaexchange.uakron.edu/docam
This Article is brought to you for free and open access by University of Akron Press Managed at IdeaExchange@UAkron, the institutional repository of The University of Akron in Akron, Ohio, USA. It has been accepted for inclusion in Proceedings from the Document Academy by an authorized administrator of IdeaExchange@UAkron. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected].
Recommended Citation Gorichanaz, Tim (2016) "Documents and Time," Proceedings from the Document Academy: Vol. 3 : Iss. 1 , Article 7. DOI: https://doi.org/10.35492/docam/3/1/7 Available at: https://ideaexchange.uakron.edu/docam/vol3/iss1/7
We were young, and we had no need for prophecies.
Just living was itself an act of prophecy.
—Haruki Murakami, The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, 1994
I.
From penciled words spring lighthouses, castles and sheep, signs warning of
clogwyni peryglus—dangerous cliffs—ferries from Ireland, sacred wells, Roman
ramparts, ancient swells and angular crags, burial rings, salty gusts and circling
birds… and the distant mountains of Snowdonia like an avalanche on the horizon.
I wrote:
I came across a farmer fixing a kissing gate at one point. This was on a path
not ten feet from a cliff into the sea. “Trying to get this gate to close is all,”
he said. “I had a spring, but it rusted. No spot for metal here.”
I remember this farmer, with his wrinkled Welsh smile, and I remember
remembering this farmer as I wrote those words late at night on Easter 2013, in my
guest room after a long day of walking. And I remember premembering my present
self, for whom I was writing, reading these words in some far off future which is
now (or, more precisely, was).
This futurepresentpast unfolds in my reading of a small, brown notebook.
The notebook is softcover, three inches by five and not a quarter-inch thick, and
inside it are written such banal observations as: “It was still 2hrs before my bus, so
I went to a restaurant”; and “I sat listening to accents and thinking about things like
denim vests”; and “I had 2 of the 4 peppers and had 3 eggs.” And yet what emerges
in reading is not at all banal. Images bubble up with phrases and thoughts, things I
didn’t or couldn’t record in the form of pencil scratches years ago. So the words I
wrote are not merely words, but triggers—for memories—reconstructed,
preconstructed, deconstructed. This is remarkable, and I’m afraid we rarely, if ever,
consider just how remarkable it is.
II.
Time is one of our great preoccupations. From the busy person, who struggles
against it, to the philosopher, who struggles to understand it, to the physicist, who
struggles to explain it. In my view, the discourse on time, which has spanned
1
Gorichanaz: Documents and Time
Published by IdeaExchange@UAkron, 2016
millennia and methodologies, has attempted to explain time from two points of
departure: the physical and the experiential.
The physical view of time has been the predominant view for most of
modernity (Lindley, 2015). The physical theories see time as that which is
measured by the clock and calendar and is necessary for the scheduling of
appointments and the routing of trains. Physical time is the physicist’s time: one-
dimensional, conceptually inextricable from space and pointing like an arrow
toward entropy (Hawking, 1988). It can be understood as a series of fleeting nows;
the nows that were are called the past, the now that is is called the present, and the
nows to come are called the future. This conception of time impinges on the way
that we, as beings in society, see the world—the reason we, as Stephen Hawking
says, “remember the past but not the future” (1988, p. 145).
Some have argued that the physical view of time does not fully capture the
complexities of the concept. A purely physical description of time cannot explain,
for example, how a person’s childhood may feel at once “like yesterday” and “like
forever ago,” or how a fifty-minute lecture may seem to fly by on a Monday but
crawl on a Friday. This was Henri Bergson’s (1889/2001) point in lambasting the
definition of time as “what a clock measures.” Using human experience as his point
of departure, Bergson sought to develop a theory of time that was non-homogenous.
Though Bergson’s theory was seen as iconoclastic, and boggling, by some of his
contemporaries (as chronicled by Canales, 2015), Bergson’s time was still
e
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