Difference between revisions of "This Tournament is a Crime"
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Kevin Wang (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Infobox question set | Name = (This) Tournament is a Crime | AltNames = TTIAC | Season = 2016-2017 | HeadEd = Auroni Gupta | Difficulty = Natio...") |
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+ | '''This Tournament is a Crime''' (or '''TTIAC''') was a [[Nationals-minus]] collegiate open tournament produced for spring of 2017. The name was derived from Adolf Loos's work ''Ornament and Crime'', which the set "[kept] with the spirit of, but ultimately [departed] from." It was head-edited by [[Auroni Gupta]], with help from [[Eddie Kim]], [[Ike Jose]], [[Andrew Wang]], and [[Bruce Lou]]. It continued some of the distributional changes from Auroni's earlier project [[George Oppen]], such as the unification of concepts from philosophy and social science into "Thought," and introduced the "Legends" subdistribution to replace mythology and more fanciful aspects of the religion distro. | ||
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[[Category: Tournaments]] | [[Category: Tournaments]] |
Latest revision as of 08:46, 8 January 2021
(This) Tournament is a Crime TTIAC | |
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Competition season | 2016-2017 |
Head editor(s) | Auroni Gupta |
Difficulty | Nationals-minus |
First mirror | February 25, 2017 |
Announcement | link |
Packets | link |
This Tournament is a Crime (or TTIAC) was a Nationals-minus collegiate open tournament produced for spring of 2017. The name was derived from Adolf Loos's work Ornament and Crime, which the set "[kept] with the spirit of, but ultimately [departed] from." It was head-edited by Auroni Gupta, with help from Eddie Kim, Ike Jose, Andrew Wang, and Bruce Lou. It continued some of the distributional changes from Auroni's earlier project George Oppen, such as the unification of concepts from philosophy and social science into "Thought," and introduced the "Legends" subdistribution to replace mythology and more fanciful aspects of the religion distro.