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61 Research products, page 1 of 7

  • Digital Humanities and Cultural Heritage
  • Norwegian
  • Norwegian Open Research Archives
  • Digital Humanities and Cultural Heritage

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  • Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Fjellstad, Wendy Jane; Puschmann, Oskar; Eiter, Sebastian; Stensgaard, Kari; Bentzen, Frode; Wallin, Hanne Gro; Dramstad, Wenche; Krøgli, Svein Olav;
    Publisher: NIBIO
    Country: Norway

    I 1998 ble Havrå det første område i Norge fredet som kulturmiljø etter kulturminnelovens § 20. Målet med fredningen var å ta vare på et vestnorsk klyngetun med tilhørende landbrukslandskap, som en historisk referanse om levekår og driftsform knyttet til det førindustrielle landbruket. Denne rapporten presenterer metoder og resultater med å etablere en første tilstandsbeskrivelse som kan brukes i fremtidig overvåking av Havrå kulturmiljø.

  • Publication . Article . 2006
    Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Magdalene Thomassen;
    Publisher: Universitetsforlaget
    Country: Norway
  • Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Stensgaard, Kari;
    Publisher: NIBIO
    Country: Norway

    Rapporten dokumenterer fotografering og registrering i et seterområde i Sjodalen i Vågå i 2019. Arbeidet refererer til et etnologisk registreringsarbeid utført samme sted 50 år tidligere, i 1969. Seterhus og seterbruk betraktes i et 50 års tidperspektiv, men også i nåtid ved sammenligning med andre seterområder i samme landsdel. Bilder fra 1969 er refotografert i 2019.

  • Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Liv Helene Willumsen;
    Publisher: Universitetsforlaget
    Country: Norway

    Publisert versjon er også tilgjengelig hos utgiver: http://doi.org/10.18261/issn.1894-3195-2016-02-07

  • Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Overrein, Nicolai; Eggebø, Ørjan;
    Publisher: Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås
    Country: Norway

    Berg-Kragerø Museum er en tidligere lystgård fra starten av 1800-tallet, som ble testamentert til Kragerø og Skåtøy kommune av den siste eieren, Henriette Marie “Jeia” Homann. Museet åpnet for publikum i 1955, og tilbyr ulike utstillinger og arrangementer. De besitter en omfattende samling av historiske bilder og objekter, og lystgårdens hovedhus står nesten uforandret fra siste eier. Museet ligger idyllisk til ved Hellefjorden, med gode tur- og rekreasjonsmuligheter. Ønsket fra Berg-Kragerø Museum var å skape mer liv og gjøre Berg til en mer attraktiv destinasjon. På bakgrunn av dette ønsket har vi utført en mulighetsstudie med fokus på hvordan formidling av lokalhistorien kan bidra til å skape en attraktiv destinasjon. Mulighetsstudien er egnet som utgangspunkt for videre forskning og videreføring av museets område. Oppgaven kartlegger en større del av lystgårdens eierhistorie sett mot den historiske utviklingen av den tilhørende parken. Gjennom arbeidet har vi forstått mer av hvordan Berg ble brukt, samt registrert historiske elementer som ikke lenger er synlige i parken. Analyser og registreringer gjort på stedet har gitt oss bedre forståelse av området og ulike hensyn som må vektlegges. Berg plante- og dyrefredningsområde er et av landets viktigste lokasjoner for mange billearter. Det legger begrensninger for bruken og videreutviklingen av området. Som et resultat av arbeidet med oppgaven foreslår vi en historisk vandring basert på Henriette Marie “Jeia” Homann, kalt “I “Jeias” fotspor”. Ved å formidle historien gjennom en vandring, unngår man større endringer innenfor museumsparken og fredningsområdet. Vandringen styrker stedsidentiteten og tilhørigheten gjennom historien knyttet til lystgården, folkene som bodde her og bruken av landskapet rundt. Sammen med vandringen foreslås “Billejakten”, en aktivitetsløype spesielt tilrettelagt barn. “Billejaken” gir kunnskap og forståelse rundt det biologiske mangfoldet og flere av de rødlistede billeartene som finnes på Berg. Berg-Kragerø Museum is a former country mansion from the early 1800s, that was given as a gift to the municipalities of Kragerø and Skåtøy by the former owner, Henriette Marie “Jeia” Homann. The museum opened its doors to the public in 1955 and offers a variety of events and exhibitions. The museum possesses a vast collection of historical photographs and objects and the main house is kept in its original form. It is beautifully located, with a view over Hellefjorden, in a terrain suited for walks and recreational activities. This thesis is based on the museum’s desire to increase the number of visitors and to make Berg a more appealing destination. We have explored the possibilities of achieving this by communicating history. The thesis provides a relevant base for further historical investigation and future restorations. We have described past ownerships and how they have affected the area’s appearance. We studied how the area had been used before and identified some elements that no longer exist in the park. Through analysis and registration, we gained a broader understanding of the area and of the cautionary measures that would need to be taken in order to protect and conserve wildlife. There is a protected wildlife zone within the museum’s property, where one of Norway’s most important locations for endangered beetles is found. As a result of our work, we suggest a historical walk based on the life of Henriette Marie “Jeia” Homann, called “In the footsteps of “Jeia””. With this walk we wanted to communicate her story, while preserving the historical ground and the protected wildlife. It will give the place a stronger identity and a better connection with its visitors. With the walk, we also propose a “Beetle hunt” in the form of an educational and entertaining trail designed for children and their families. The “beetle hunt” -trail provides knowledge and raises awareness of the local biodiversity and the endangered beetles. M-LA

  • Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Rognald Heiseldal Bergesen;
    Publisher: Septentrio Academic Publishing
    Country: Norway

    Published version. Source at http://dx.doi.org/10.7557/13.3689. The interior of the parish church at Trondenes in Harstad in Northern Norway is one of the best-preserved medieval interiors in Scandinavia. Four of its reredos have survived, three of them in situ. A significant characteristic of the decoration in the church is the pronounced presence of St. Anne and the Holy Kinship. The article explores the roles of these motifs in the iconography at Trondenes. Even though there are no sources related to the specific religious use of these motifs at Trondenes, our general knowledge of their cult elsewhere in Europe suggests how they might have been used in Trondenes. Among ordinary people in the medieval Northern Germany, the cult of Saint Anne and the Holy Kinship were related to the protection of sailors and to secure the growth of their income, as well as to protect against diseases. Usually these motifs were found in maritime, urban regions. St. Anne was regarded as a role model for the middle class women, and the Holy Kinship as a “self-image” of the trading middle class. Trondenes is the main Church in a large maritime region. In the late middle ages the fisheries along the coastline provided large incomes to the chapter of the Cathedral of Nidaros who owned Trondenes and to the local merchants at Trondenes. In such circumstances it is reasonable that the presence of St. Anne and the Holy Kinship at Trondenes was related to the protection of local sailors and to the growth of income from the fisheries.

  • Publication . Master thesis . 2014
    Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Blewitt, Kevin;

    The archaeological and literary records often appear to be at odds with oneanother when analyzed in the academic mileau. Identifying what sources are and are not reliable and accurate is one of the larger arguments in academia today. In this work, I have attempted to approach the issue of the Norse cultic practices before the arrival of Christianity. By comparing and contrasting the literary and archaeological sources on cultic structures, I hope to not only elucidate the picture of what Norse cultic practices were but also seek to analyze the relationship between the two types of sources. In order to do this, I have focused primarily on the Saga of Haakon the Good and the descriptions of Norse pre-Christian rituals within. I have contrasted this with examples of identified cultic sites primarily from Norway.

  • Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Lisbeth Pettersen Wærp;
    Publisher: Septentrio Academic Publishing
    Country: Norway

    Published version. Source at http://doi.org/10.7557/13.3762. License CC BY 4.0. This article examines Gunnar Sommerfeldt’s 1921 silent movie adaptation of Knut Hamsun’s Nobel Prize novel Markens Grøde [Growth of the Soil] (1917). The article argues that what characterizes this very first Hamsun film adaptation is its emphasis on the dramatic and the spectacular and its foregrounding of northern Norwegian nature. Inspired by Martin Lefebvre’s distinction in Landscape and Film (2006) between nature-as-setting and nature-as-landscape, this article argues that the film not only uses nature as its main setting, but that it also makes use of a series of autonomous landscapes with a fairy tale dimension. Several of its visual compositions of persons and landscapes seem to be inspired by Norwegian nature and fairy tale painter Theodor Kittelsen’s work, e.g. Soria Moria Slott, Nøkken, Pesta and Norge, Norge.

  • Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Gutiérrez, Regina Valdés;
    Publisher: OsloMet - Storbyuniversitetet
    Country: Norway

    In 1960, the Mexican government, through the Secretary of Public Education (SEP), implemented a policy of standardized textbooks for all. Every school student in the country, be they in public or private education, would receive a textbook for each subject of every grade free of charge. Since then, there have been nine sets of books, called generations. Throughout these generations, there are substantial changes on how they are written and how they portray certain people or events. This thesis explores those differences in the narrations and images of historic events in Mexico. More specifically, the thesis focuses on the History books used in 4th and 5th grade of elementary school from the generations of 1960, 1993, and 2014. I examine the changes in the representation of Spain, the Catholic Church, the United States, and historical figures important to Mexican history across the generations. The thesis is based on document analysis, particularly drawing on discourse analysis. I combine elements from Critical discourse analysis (CDA) and Discursive psychology to explore the content of the textbooks from different angles, particularly emphasizing the role of the textbooks in forging a national identity and national cohesion through the exaltation of heroes and common enemies. The textbooks are seen as tools for the Mexican state in the construction of a common identity, to promote collective views and values, to legitimize governments, and to impact the perception of external actors, such as Spain, the Church and United States.

  • Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Anders Johan W. Andersen;
    Publisher: Universitetsforlaget
    Country: Norway

    Author's version of an article in the journal: Tidsskrift for psykisk helsearbeid. Also available from the publisher at: http://www.idunn.no/ts/tph/2011/01/art01 Denne artikkelen er en undersøkelse av Tidsskrift for psykisk helsearbeid i perioden 2004-2010. Undersøkelsen viser stor variasjon når det gjelder bidragsyternes utdannings- og erfaringsbakgrunn, og organisatorisk tilhørighet. Innholdet i Tidsskriftet er dominert av et budskap om forandring både i tenkning og praksis. Dette diskuteres i lys av myndighetenes strategier for styring og kontroll, og forfatteren etterlyser større dristighet fra helsemyndighetene når det gjelder å gi kraft til en slik forandring. Critical Reflections - investigations from an outgoing Editor-in-Chief This article presents the results from an investigation of the Scandinavian Journal ?Tidsskrift for psykisk helsearbeid? in the period 2004-2010. The results show variation among the contributors both in educational background, life-experience and organisational affiliation. The main message from the Journal is change; change both in models of understanding and in the mental health services. This message is shortly discussed in light of the Governments strategies for management and social control. The author calls for more boldness from the health authorities in order to empower the work towards change in the services.

Advanced search in Research products
Research products
arrow_drop_down
Searching FieldsTerms
Any field
arrow_drop_down
includes
arrow_drop_down
Include:
The following results are related to Digital Humanities and Cultural Heritage. Are you interested to view more results? Visit OpenAIRE - Explore.
61 Research products, page 1 of 7
  • Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Fjellstad, Wendy Jane; Puschmann, Oskar; Eiter, Sebastian; Stensgaard, Kari; Bentzen, Frode; Wallin, Hanne Gro; Dramstad, Wenche; Krøgli, Svein Olav;
    Publisher: NIBIO
    Country: Norway

    I 1998 ble Havrå det første område i Norge fredet som kulturmiljø etter kulturminnelovens § 20. Målet med fredningen var å ta vare på et vestnorsk klyngetun med tilhørende landbrukslandskap, som en historisk referanse om levekår og driftsform knyttet til det førindustrielle landbruket. Denne rapporten presenterer metoder og resultater med å etablere en første tilstandsbeskrivelse som kan brukes i fremtidig overvåking av Havrå kulturmiljø.

  • Publication . Article . 2006
    Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Magdalene Thomassen;
    Publisher: Universitetsforlaget
    Country: Norway
  • Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Stensgaard, Kari;
    Publisher: NIBIO
    Country: Norway

    Rapporten dokumenterer fotografering og registrering i et seterområde i Sjodalen i Vågå i 2019. Arbeidet refererer til et etnologisk registreringsarbeid utført samme sted 50 år tidligere, i 1969. Seterhus og seterbruk betraktes i et 50 års tidperspektiv, men også i nåtid ved sammenligning med andre seterområder i samme landsdel. Bilder fra 1969 er refotografert i 2019.

  • Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Liv Helene Willumsen;
    Publisher: Universitetsforlaget
    Country: Norway

    Publisert versjon er også tilgjengelig hos utgiver: http://doi.org/10.18261/issn.1894-3195-2016-02-07

  • Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Overrein, Nicolai; Eggebø, Ørjan;
    Publisher: Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås
    Country: Norway

    Berg-Kragerø Museum er en tidligere lystgård fra starten av 1800-tallet, som ble testamentert til Kragerø og Skåtøy kommune av den siste eieren, Henriette Marie “Jeia” Homann. Museet åpnet for publikum i 1955, og tilbyr ulike utstillinger og arrangementer. De besitter en omfattende samling av historiske bilder og objekter, og lystgårdens hovedhus står nesten uforandret fra siste eier. Museet ligger idyllisk til ved Hellefjorden, med gode tur- og rekreasjonsmuligheter. Ønsket fra Berg-Kragerø Museum var å skape mer liv og gjøre Berg til en mer attraktiv destinasjon. På bakgrunn av dette ønsket har vi utført en mulighetsstudie med fokus på hvordan formidling av lokalhistorien kan bidra til å skape en attraktiv destinasjon. Mulighetsstudien er egnet som utgangspunkt for videre forskning og videreføring av museets område. Oppgaven kartlegger en større del av lystgårdens eierhistorie sett mot den historiske utviklingen av den tilhørende parken. Gjennom arbeidet har vi forstått mer av hvordan Berg ble brukt, samt registrert historiske elementer som ikke lenger er synlige i parken. Analyser og registreringer gjort på stedet har gitt oss bedre forståelse av området og ulike hensyn som må vektlegges. Berg plante- og dyrefredningsområde er et av landets viktigste lokasjoner for mange billearter. Det legger begrensninger for bruken og videreutviklingen av området. Som et resultat av arbeidet med oppgaven foreslår vi en historisk vandring basert på Henriette Marie “Jeia” Homann, kalt “I “Jeias” fotspor”. Ved å formidle historien gjennom en vandring, unngår man større endringer innenfor museumsparken og fredningsområdet. Vandringen styrker stedsidentiteten og tilhørigheten gjennom historien knyttet til lystgården, folkene som bodde her og bruken av landskapet rundt. Sammen med vandringen foreslås “Billejakten”, en aktivitetsløype spesielt tilrettelagt barn. “Billejaken” gir kunnskap og forståelse rundt det biologiske mangfoldet og flere av de rødlistede billeartene som finnes på Berg. Berg-Kragerø Museum is a former country mansion from the early 1800s, that was given as a gift to the municipalities of Kragerø and Skåtøy by the former owner, Henriette Marie “Jeia” Homann. The museum opened its doors to the public in 1955 and offers a variety of events and exhibitions. The museum possesses a vast collection of historical photographs and objects and the main house is kept in its original form. It is beautifully located, with a view over Hellefjorden, in a terrain suited for walks and recreational activities. This thesis is based on the museum’s desire to increase the number of visitors and to make Berg a more appealing destination. We have explored the possibilities of achieving this by communicating history. The thesis provides a relevant base for further historical investigation and future restorations. We have described past ownerships and how they have affected the area’s appearance. We studied how the area had been used before and identified some elements that no longer exist in the park. Through analysis and registration, we gained a broader understanding of the area and of the cautionary measures that would need to be taken in order to protect and conserve wildlife. There is a protected wildlife zone within the museum’s property, where one of Norway’s most important locations for endangered beetles is found. As a result of our work, we suggest a historical walk based on the life of Henriette Marie “Jeia” Homann, called “In the footsteps of “Jeia””. With this walk we wanted to communicate her story, while preserving the historical ground and the protected wildlife. It will give the place a stronger identity and a better connection with its visitors. With the walk, we also propose a “Beetle hunt” in the form of an educational and entertaining trail designed for children and their families. The “beetle hunt” -trail provides knowledge and raises awareness of the local biodiversity and the endangered beetles. M-LA

  • Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Rognald Heiseldal Bergesen;
    Publisher: Septentrio Academic Publishing
    Country: Norway

    Published version. Source at http://dx.doi.org/10.7557/13.3689. The interior of the parish church at Trondenes in Harstad in Northern Norway is one of the best-preserved medieval interiors in Scandinavia. Four of its reredos have survived, three of them in situ. A significant characteristic of the decoration in the church is the pronounced presence of St. Anne and the Holy Kinship. The article explores the roles of these motifs in the iconography at Trondenes. Even though there are no sources related to the specific religious use of these motifs at Trondenes, our general knowledge of their cult elsewhere in Europe suggests how they might have been used in Trondenes. Among ordinary people in the medieval Northern Germany, the cult of Saint Anne and the Holy Kinship were related to the protection of sailors and to secure the growth of their income, as well as to protect against diseases. Usually these motifs were found in maritime, urban regions. St. Anne was regarded as a role model for the middle class women, and the Holy Kinship as a “self-image” of the trading middle class. Trondenes is the main Church in a large maritime region. In the late middle ages the fisheries along the coastline provided large incomes to the chapter of the Cathedral of Nidaros who owned Trondenes and to the local merchants at Trondenes. In such circumstances it is reasonable that the presence of St. Anne and the Holy Kinship at Trondenes was related to the protection of local sailors and to the growth of income from the fisheries.

  • Publication . Master thesis . 2014
    Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Blewitt, Kevin;

    The archaeological and literary records often appear to be at odds with oneanother when analyzed in the academic mileau. Identifying what sources are and are not reliable and accurate is one of the larger arguments in academia today. In this work, I have attempted to approach the issue of the Norse cultic practices before the arrival of Christianity. By comparing and contrasting the literary and archaeological sources on cultic structures, I hope to not only elucidate the picture of what Norse cultic practices were but also seek to analyze the relationship between the two types of sources. In order to do this, I have focused primarily on the Saga of Haakon the Good and the descriptions of Norse pre-Christian rituals within. I have contrasted this with examples of identified cultic sites primarily from Norway.

  • Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Lisbeth Pettersen Wærp;
    Publisher: Septentrio Academic Publishing
    Country: Norway

    Published version. Source at http://doi.org/10.7557/13.3762. License CC BY 4.0. This article examines Gunnar Sommerfeldt’s 1921 silent movie adaptation of Knut Hamsun’s Nobel Prize novel Markens Grøde [Growth of the Soil] (1917). The article argues that what characterizes this very first Hamsun film adaptation is its emphasis on the dramatic and the spectacular and its foregrounding of northern Norwegian nature. Inspired by Martin Lefebvre’s distinction in Landscape and Film (2006) between nature-as-setting and nature-as-landscape, this article argues that the film not only uses nature as its main setting, but that it also makes use of a series of autonomous landscapes with a fairy tale dimension. Several of its visual compositions of persons and landscapes seem to be inspired by Norwegian nature and fairy tale painter Theodor Kittelsen’s work, e.g. Soria Moria Slott, Nøkken, Pesta and Norge, Norge.

  • Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Gutiérrez, Regina Valdés;
    Publisher: OsloMet - Storbyuniversitetet
    Country: Norway

    In 1960, the Mexican government, through the Secretary of Public Education (SEP), implemented a policy of standardized textbooks for all. Every school student in the country, be they in public or private education, would receive a textbook for each subject of every grade free of charge. Since then, there have been nine sets of books, called generations. Throughout these generations, there are substantial changes on how they are written and how they portray certain people or events. This thesis explores those differences in the narrations and images of historic events in Mexico. More specifically, the thesis focuses on the History books used in 4th and 5th grade of elementary school from the generations of 1960, 1993, and 2014. I examine the changes in the representation of Spain, the Catholic Church, the United States, and historical figures important to Mexican history across the generations. The thesis is based on document analysis, particularly drawing on discourse analysis. I combine elements from Critical discourse analysis (CDA) and Discursive psychology to explore the content of the textbooks from different angles, particularly emphasizing the role of the textbooks in forging a national identity and national cohesion through the exaltation of heroes and common enemies. The textbooks are seen as tools for the Mexican state in the construction of a common identity, to promote collective views and values, to legitimize governments, and to impact the perception of external actors, such as Spain, the Church and United States.

  • Open Access Norwegian
    Authors: 
    Anders Johan W. Andersen;
    Publisher: Universitetsforlaget
    Country: Norway

    Author's version of an article in the journal: Tidsskrift for psykisk helsearbeid. Also available from the publisher at: http://www.idunn.no/ts/tph/2011/01/art01 Denne artikkelen er en undersøkelse av Tidsskrift for psykisk helsearbeid i perioden 2004-2010. Undersøkelsen viser stor variasjon når det gjelder bidragsyternes utdannings- og erfaringsbakgrunn, og organisatorisk tilhørighet. Innholdet i Tidsskriftet er dominert av et budskap om forandring både i tenkning og praksis. Dette diskuteres i lys av myndighetenes strategier for styring og kontroll, og forfatteren etterlyser større dristighet fra helsemyndighetene når det gjelder å gi kraft til en slik forandring. Critical Reflections - investigations from an outgoing Editor-in-Chief This article presents the results from an investigation of the Scandinavian Journal ?Tidsskrift for psykisk helsearbeid? in the period 2004-2010. The results show variation among the contributors both in educational background, life-experience and organisational affiliation. The main message from the Journal is change; change both in models of understanding and in the mental health services. This message is shortly discussed in light of the Governments strategies for management and social control. The author calls for more boldness from the health authorities in order to empower the work towards change in the services.