References:
Books used in the project
• Khasakkinte Ithihasam by O.V. Vijayan
• Khasak Padanangal, by several authors
• Ithihasathinte Ithihasam by O.V. Vijayan
Publications
• Retrieved from
http://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/131317/9/09_chapter%204.pdf
• Retrieved from
http://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/131317/9/09_chapter%204.pdf
• Bhasthi, D. (2019. Feb. 15. Never Leaving Khasak.Retreived from:
https://www.thehindubusinessline.com/blink/takeaway/never-leaving-khasak/article26278839.ece
• Narayanan, S. (2018. June, 12). Kerala’s Magical Realist and political commentator; why everyone should read O.V. Vijayan. Retrieved from:
https://www.thenewsminute.com/article/kerala-s-magic-realist-and-political-commentator-why-everyone-should-read-ov-vijayan-82895
• Jose, N.J. ( 2018. Aug. 25). Legends of Khasak. Retrieved from:
https://www.merakipost.com/2018/08/legends-of-khasak/
• https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_realism
• http://cafeirreal.alicewhittenburg.com/review4c.htm
• Ithihasathinte Ithihasam, O.V. Vijayan
• Moretti, F. (1999). Atlas of the European novel, 1800-1900. Verso.
• Luchetta, S. (2017). Exploring the literary map: An analytical review of online literary mapping projects. Geography Compass, 11(1), e12303.
• Piatti, B., & Hurni, L. (2011). Cartographies of fictional worlds. Cartographic Journal, 48(4), 218-223.
• Caquard, S. (2011). Cartographies of fictional worlds: Conclusive remarks. The Cartographic Journal, 48(4), 224-225.
• Moretti, F. (1999). Atlas of the European novel, 1800-1900.Verso
• Luchetta, S. (2017). Exploring the literary map: An analytical review of online literary mapping projects. Geography Compass, 11(1), e12303.
• Habermann, I., & Kuhn, N. (2011). Sustainable Fictions–Geographical, Literary and Cultural Intersections in JRR Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings. The Cartographi Journal, 48(4), 263-273.
• Caquard, S. (2011). Cartographies of fictional worlds: Conclusive remarks. The Cartographic Journal, 48(4), 224-225.
• Ryan, M. L. (2015). Narration in various media. Handbook of narratology, 1, 468-488.
• Piatti, B., & Hurni, L. (2011). Cartographies of fictional worlds. Cartographic Journal, 48(4), 218-223.
• Stockhammer, R. (2013). Exokeanismós: the (un) mappability of literature. Primerjalna Knjizevnost, 36(2), 123.
• Cooper, D., & Priestnall, G. (2011). The processual intertextuality of literary cartographies: Critical and digital practices. The Cartographic Journal, 48(4), 250-262.
• Soja, E. W., & Chouinard, V. (1999). Thirdspace: journeys to Los Angeles & other real & imagined places. Canadian Geographer, 43(2), 209.
• Piatti, B., & Hurni, L. (2011). Cartographies of fictional worlds. Cartographic Journal, 48(4), 218-223.
• Luchetta, S. (2017). Exploring the literary map: An analytical review of online literary mapping projects. Geography Compass, 11(1), e12303.
• Caquard, S. (2013). Cartography I: Mapping narrative cartography. Progress in Human Geography, 37(1), 135-144.
• Silbernagel, J., Host, G., Hagley, C., Hart, D., Axler, R., Fortner, R.,... & Danz, N. (2015). Linking place-based science to people through spatial narratives of coastal stewardship. Journal of coastal conservation, 19(2), 181-198.
• Brasher, J. P. (2017). Narrating Space/Spatializing Narrative: Where Narrative Theory and Geography Meet.
• Piatti, B., Bär, H. R., Reuschel, A. K., Hurni, L., & Cartwright, W. (2009). Mapping literature: Towards a geography of fiction. In Cartography and art (pp. 1-16). Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg.
• Erdmann, E. (2011). Topographical fiction: A world map of international crime fiction. The Cartographic Journal, 48(4), 274-284.
• Caquard, S., & Cartwright, W. (2014). Narrative cartography: From mapping stories to the narrative of maps and mapping.
• Weber Reuschel, A. K., Piatti, B., & Hurni, L. (2014). Data-driven expansion of dense regions–A cartographic approach in literary geography. The Cartographic Journal, 51(2), 123-140.
• Cook, K. A., & Thomas, J. J. (2005). Illuminating the path: The research and development agenda for visual analytics (No. PNNL-SA-45230). Pacific Northwest National Lab.(PNNL), Richland, WA (United States).
• Jockers, M. L. (2014). Text analysis with R for students of literature. New York: Springer.
• http://www.stefanieposavec.com/writing-without-words
• http://rasagy.in/blog/2013/09/visualizing-500-days-of-summer/
• M. K. Menon, Khasak Studies
• M. Shanmukhadas, Khasak Studies
• Asha Menon, Khasak Studies
• M. Krishnanan Namboothiri, Khasak Studies
• M. Krishnanan Namboothiri, Khasak Studies
• Chatman, S. (1978). 1978Story and discourse narrative structure in fiction and film.
• [Galyean, T. A. (1995). Narrative guidance of interactivity (Doctoral dissertation, Massachusetts Institute of Technology).]
• [Skov, M. B. (2002). Design of interactive narratives: concepts, methods, and architectures. Department of Computer Science, The Faculty of Engineering and Science, Aalborg University.]
• Lindeman, R. W., & Beckhaus, S. (2009, November). Crafting memorable VR experiences using experiential fidelity. In Proceedings of the 16th ACM Symposium on Virtual Reality Software and Technology (pp. 187-190). ACM.
• Vermeulen, I. E., Roth, C., Vorderer, P., & Klimmt, C. (2010, November). Measuring user responses to interactive stories: Towards a standardized assessment tool. In Joint International Conference on Interactive Digital Storytelling (pp. 38-43). Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg.
• Roth, C., & Koenitz, H. (2016, October). Evaluating the user experience of interactive digital narrative. In Proceedings of the 1st International Workshop on Multimedia Alternate Realities (pp.31-36). ACM.
Other Links:
• Useful resource e-links related to 'Interaction Design'
• Interaction Design at IDC IIT Bombay
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