- The Mongoliad
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The Mongoliad
Application splash screen for The MongoliadAuthor(s) Neal Stephenson
Greg BearCountry United States Language English Subject(s) Middle Ages, Mongol Empire Publisher Subutai Corporation Publication date 2010 Media type Smartphone, Web The Mongoliad is an experimental fiction project of the Subutai Corporation, initially released in September of 2010. The corporation is an application company based in San Francisco and Seattle,[1] whose chairman is speculative fiction author Neal Stephenson. Stephenson is the guiding force of the project, in which he is joined by colleagues including Greg Bear.[2]
The work is intended to be distributed primarily as a series of applications ("apps") for smartphones, which the Corporation views as a new model for publishing storytelling.[3] At the project's core is a narrative of adventure fiction following the exploits of a small group of fighters and mystics in medieval Europe around the time of the Mongol conquests. As well as speculative fiction authors Neal Stephenson, Greg Bear, Nicole Galland, Mark Teppo and others, collaborators include filmmakers, computer programmers, graphic artists, martial artists and combat choreographers, video game designers, and a professional editor. In a departure from conventional fiction, much of the content of The Mongoliad will be in forms other than text, not bound to any single medium and not in the service of the central narrative. Once the project develops momentum, the Corporation envisions fans of the work contributing, expanding and enriching the narrative and the fictional universe in which it takes place.[3]
In the telling of the Corporation's president Jeremy Bornstein, the genesis of the project was in Stephenson's dissatisfaction with the authenticity of the medieval sword fighting scenes he had written into his Baroque cycle of novels.[1][4] Stephenson gathered a group of martial arts enthusiasts interested in studying historical European swordfighting, and this eventually resulted in some of the members of this group collaborating on a set of stories which would make use of accurate representations of these martial arts.[5][6] The collaborators decided the project need not limit itself to traditional novel form, and began developing ideas on how to produce it in different media while retaining the caliber that would be expected of a new work by authors such as Stephenson or Bear.[1]
An "alpha version" was demonstrated at the periodic application showcase SF App Show in San Francisco, California on May 25, 2010.[3][1]
The project went live on September 1, 2010. New chapters, as well as supplemental materials, are released on a weekly basis. The Mongoliad iPhone and iPad applications are available in the Apple App Store, and other supported platforms will include the Android and Kindle.[3]
Related topics
- 253 (novel), a novel released in 1996 in the form of a website
- The Diamond Age, or, a Young Lady's Illustrated Primer, a 1995 novel by Stephenson which described interactive media
- Interactive novel
- Live action role-playing game
- The Plant, a 2000 novel by Stephen King which was serialized in e-book form
Sources
- ^ a b c d Terdiman, Daniel (May 27, 2010). "Mongoliad will be an interactive serial novel produced for the iPad". Crave. CNet Asia. http://asia.cnet.com/crave/2010/05/27/neal-stephenson-to-launch-interactive-novel-for-the-ipad/. Retrieved July 4, 2010.
- ^ Eaton, Kit (May 26, 2010). "The Mongoliad App: Neal Stephenson's Novel of the Future?". Fast Company. http://www.fastcompany.com/1652609/mongoliad-neal-stephenson-bear-galland-novel-app-social-media-writer-writing. Retrieved July 4, 2010.
- ^ a b c d Anders, Charlie Jane (May 21, 2010). "What on Earth is Neal Stephenson's Mongoliad?". io9. Gawker Media. http://io9.com/5544802/what-on-earth-is-neal-stephensons-mongoliad. Retrieved July 4, 2010.
- ^ Stephenson, Neal. "Rapier vs. Katana reconsidered". http://web.mac.com/nealstephenson/Neal_Stephensons_Site/Rapier_vs._Katana.html. Retrieved July 4, 2010.
- ^ Bornstein, Jeremy. "Jeremy Bornstein & Lenny Raymond, The Mongoliad, Dorkbot-SF, 2010-06-09". Dorkbot. http://vimeo.com/12625133. Retrieved July 4, 2010.
- ^ Newitz, Annalee (May 28, 2010). "Neal Stephenson and friends fight for the future of ebooks with The Mongoliad". io9. Gawker Media. http://io9.com/5549740/neal-stephenson-and-friends-fight-for-the-future-of-ebooks-with-the-mongoliad. Retrieved July 4, 2010.
External links
- Official website
- Subutai Corporation
- The Mongoliad at Facebook
- "Historical Scope" on YouTube from the Subutai Corporation channel
- "Neal Stephenson, Greg Bear and friends launch The Mongoliad: a shared universe that could only live on the Web", Boing Boing, May 25, 2010
- The Mongoliad discussed at Futurismic.com
Works by Neal Stephenson Novels The Big U (1984) • Zodiac (1988) • Snow Crash (1992) • The Diamond Age (1995) • Cryptonomicon (1999) • Anathem (2008) • The Mongoliad (2010) • Reamde (2011)Stephen BuryInterface (1994) • The Cobweb (1996)Short stories "Spew" (1994) • "The Great Simoleon Caper" (1995) • "Excerpt from the Third and Last Volume of Tribes of the Pacific Northwest" (1995) • "Jipi and the Paranoid Chip" (1997)Essays "Smiley's people" (1993) • "In the Kingdom of Mao Bell" (1994) • "Mother Earth Mother Board" (1996) • "Global Neighborhood Watch" (1998) • In the Beginning... was the Command Line (1999)Categories:- 2010 works
- Adventure fiction
- Electronic literature
- Europe in fiction
- Works by Greg Bear
- Works by Neal Stephenson
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