Difference between revisions of "Et Morshjerte"

From Nordic Larp Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m
 
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Larp
+
{{Infobox larp design
 
|image=morshjerte.png
 
|image=morshjerte.png
|date=[[2011]]
+
|designers={{plainlist|*[[Christina Christensen]] (author)
|full_credits=[[Christina Christensen]] (author), [[Eirik Fatland]] (dramaturge, writer)
+
*[[Eirik Fatland]] (dramaturge, writer)}}
|country=[[Norway]]
+
|first_run=2010 in Norway
 
|name=Et Morshjerte
 
|name=Et Morshjerte
 
|duration=1-2 hours
 
|duration=1-2 hours
|number_of_players=10-50
+
|participants=10-50
 
}}
 
}}
  
 
'''Et Morshjerte''' (''A Mother's Heart'') is a rerunnable larp, about women who stand trial for the crime of being bad mothers in a strange court of the unconscious. The larp is notable for including an in-character audience, where participants may join or leave at any time, an artifact of it having been designed for a gallery context.
 
'''Et Morshjerte''' (''A Mother's Heart'') is a rerunnable larp, about women who stand trial for the crime of being bad mothers in a strange court of the unconscious. The larp is notable for including an in-character audience, where participants may join or leave at any time, an artifact of it having been designed for a gallery context.
  
An English translation of the larpscript was published in the anthology [[Larps from the factory]].
+
An English translation of the larpscript was published in the anthology [[Larps from the Factory]].
 +
[[Category:Larps]]
 +
[[Category:Chamber larps]]

Latest revision as of 22:46, 13 January 2019

Et Morshjerte
Morshjerte.png
Duration1-2 hours
Designed by
Participants10-50
First run2010 in Norway


Et Morshjerte (A Mother's Heart) is a rerunnable larp, about women who stand trial for the crime of being bad mothers in a strange court of the unconscious. The larp is notable for including an in-character audience, where participants may join or leave at any time, an artifact of it having been designed for a gallery context.

An English translation of the larpscript was published in the anthology Larps from the Factory.