The Eschatology Scholarship Database

dc.contributor.advisorHiebert, Ted
dc.contributor.advisorBorsuk, Amaranth
dc.contributor.authorNelson, Elfie Lyn
dc.date.accessioned2025-08-01T22:12:12Z
dc.date.available2025-08-01T22:12:12Z
dc.date.issued2025-08-01
dc.date.submitted2025
dc.descriptionThesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2025
dc.description.abstractThe Eschatology Scholarship Database is a collaborative digital archive that explores the ethics of misinformation, memory, and apocalypse. Styled as a future-facing wiki, the project invites contributors to imagine themselves as posthuman entities reconstructing the end of the world from fractured, inconsistent evidence. Each entry is part of a (still) growing corpus of invented scholarship, designed to mimic the tone and structure of academic research while remaining entirely fictional. Contributors generate narrative ruptures through hyperlinks that expand the archive outward in fractal patterns, displacing linear history and authorship. It transforms archival space into a site of play and emergence, where contributors re/member community by writing new futures. Together, Janus and other future historians will build a corpus that reflects neither the shape nor authority of the human body. In so doing, the Database will become a speculative body of misinformation that plays with the aesthetics of knowledge to reveal its biases and imagine alternatives.
dc.embargo.termsOpen Access
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.identifier.otherNelson_washington_0250O_28084.pdf
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1773/53286
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.rightsCC BY-SA
dc.subjectdigital literature
dc.subjectpoetics
dc.subjectCreative writing
dc.subject.otherInterdisciplinary arts and sciences - Bothell
dc.titleThe Eschatology Scholarship Database
dc.typeThesis

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
Nelson_washington_0250O_28084.pdf
Size:
1.05 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format