Barbelith
Barbelith was an
The Invisibles
In The Invisibles, Barbelith is the name of the "
Prior to contact with Barbelith, most characters undergo some sort of trauma or intensity- an
The word first appeared on a sign post in House of Heart's Desire, a short story published in 1989 within the pages of
Grant Morrison describes its origins as follows: "The word 'BARBELiTH' is derived from a dream I had when I was about 20 or 21 and coincided with my first structured 'magical' experiences and a minor nervous breakdown (in the dream, BARBELiTH was the name of some higher dimension or
Barbelith is inspired by the
Perhaps of note, in
The forum
The forum was originally named The Nexus, created in 1998 as a part of The Invisibles annotation site The Bomb. Over time, topics of discussion moved beyond the comic book, especially after the series came to an end in 2000. As the forum's subject matter expanded, it was renamed Barbelith Underground and eventually moved to the front page of the barbelith.com domain. It was run by Tom Coates and its code was written by Cal Henderson.
Unlike other online communities, moderation actions (such as editing or deleting posts or topics) were done through "distributed moderation": the code established a voting system in which more than one moderator had to agree before a change took place.[1] In Tom Coates' words: "Communities are hard-work to maintain, prone to spats and arguments, can spiral out of control and don't always want to move in the same direction as the people who consider themselves 'in charge'. Distributing the power rather more creates the opportunity to help the community define itself."[2]
Its sub-forums were:
- Conversation ("For off-topic discussion, introductions and chatting"),
- Policy & Help ("Board policy, technical errors & problems about trolls"),
- Head Shop ("Philosophy, Cultural Studies and Identity Politics"),
- Laboratory ("New technologies, pure science, medicine and medical ethics),
- Switchboard ("Politics, activism and current affairs"),
- Temple ("Faith, magic and mysticism, bodywork, and applied psychology"),
- Art, Fashion and Design ("Fine art, high fashion, product and graphic design"),
- Books, Criticism & Writing ("Novels, periodicals, short stories and the literary world");
- Comic Books ("Graphic Novels and Comics - superheroes to social-commentary");
- Film, TV & Theatre ("Movies, Television and on the stage");
- Games & Gameplay ("Videogames, board games, RPGs, sport - the mechanics of play");
- Radio & Music ("From Bowie to Britney, punk to Daft Punk");
- Creation ("Collaborative or individual creative projects")
- Gathering ("Organising gatherings - unlawful or otherwise").
The forum served as the origin point of Jenny Everywhere, the first open-source comic character.[3]
As of the beginning of 2012 there was little activity from remaining members on the board. This was largely due to the closure of the board to new admissions. Increasing fear of "trolls", and the fact that one person had sole responsibility for the board, led to a prolonged period of decline in new material and membership.
References
- ^ "Distributed Moderation".
- ^ "Everything in Moderation: A guide to Slashdot's Moderation Scheme". Archived from the original on 2018-10-05. Retrieved 2018-10-05.
- ^ "Who Is Jenny Everywhere?" Archived 2019-07-14 at the Wayback Machine by Jeff Macharyas, OpenSource.com, 5 Oct 2018.