# det sublime

> creative work by Frank Altschul Jensen

**Wikidata**: [Q132199673](https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q132199673)  
**Source**: https://4ort.xyz/entity/det-sublime

## Summary
det sublime is a Danish-language creative work of hypertext fiction and electronic literature by Frank Altschul Jensen. Published in 2007 and recorded in the ELMCiP archive (elmcip_id 6908), it is also classified as an application built using the Adobe Flash engine and published in an academic journal.

## Key Facts
- det sublime is a creative work by Frank Altschul Jensen.  
- The work is classified as hypertext fiction and electronic literature.  
- det sublime is in Danish (language of work or name: Danish).  
- It was published in 2007.  
- The work is recorded in the ELMCiP archive with elmcip_id 6908.  
- det sublime is also described as an application (software program/group of programs designed for end-users).  
- The software engine listed for det sublime is Adobe Flash.  
- The work was published in an academic journal.

## FAQs
### Q: What is det sublime?
A: det sublime is a Danish-language piece of hypertext fiction and electronic literature created by Frank Altschul Jensen. It is also classified as an application and was published in 2007.

### Q: Who created det sublime?
A: det sublime was created by Frank Altschul Jensen (author name string: Frank Altschul Jensen).

### Q: When and where was det sublime published?
A: det sublime was published in 2007 and the publication is noted as appearing in an academic journal.

### Q: What technology does det sublime use?
A: det sublime is listed as using the Adobe Flash software engine.

## Why It Matters
det sublime occupies a place at the intersection of literary practice and digital media. As a work labeled both hypertext fiction and electronic literature, it exemplifies approaches to storytelling that use linked, non-linear structures and digital interactivity. Its publication in an academic journal signals that it has been acknowledged within scholarly discourse, and its inclusion in the ELMCiP archive (elmcip_id 6908) provides a record within the field of electronic literature studies. Being built with Adobe Flash situates the work in the technical context of mid-2000s digital creation, when Flash was a common engine for interactive literary and artistic projects. For researchers and readers interested in Danish electronic literature, hypertext narratives, or the history of Flash-based digital works, det sublime is a documented example linking creative practice and academic attention.

## Notable For
- Being a Danish-language example of hypertext fiction and electronic literature.  
- Authorship by Frank Altschul Jensen and clear attribution in bibliographic records.  
- Publication in 2007 and documented presence in an academic journal.  
- Use of the Adobe Flash engine as its listed software platform.  
- Inclusion in the ELMCiP archive with elmcip_id 6908.

## Body
### Identity and Classification
- Title: det sublime (described as a creative work by Frank Altschul Jensen).  
- Instance of: creative work; application (software program or group of programs designed for end-users).  
- Wikidata description: creative work by Frank Altschul Jensen.

### Authorship and Language
- Author: Frank Altschul Jensen (author name string confirmed).  
- Language: Danish.

### Genre and Form
- Primary genre classification: hypertext fiction.  
- Also classified under: electronic literature.  
- These classifications indicate the work uses digital, non-linear, or hyperlinked narrative structures typical of electronic literary practice.

### Publication and Archival Record
- Publication date: 2007.  
- Published in: an academic journal (publication context noted as academic).  
- Archival identifier: elmcip_id 6908 (entry in the ELMCiP archive).

### Technical Details
- Software engine: Adobe Flash (listed as the engine used).  
- Classification as an application indicates the work can be regarded as software or as a software-driven creative object.

### Contextual Notes
- The combination of hypertext fiction, academic publication, and Flash as an engine places det sublime within the mid-2000s milieu of digital literary experimentation and scholarly interest in electronic texts.