Description

Book Synopsis
Computer games have fundamentally altered the relation of self and society in the digital age. Analysing topics such as technology and power, the formation of gaming culture and the subjective impact of play with computer games, this text will be of great interest to students and scholars of digital media, games studies and the information society.

Trade Review
"It is well researched, well argued, and one of the finest books to date on the subject of digital games."
New Media and Society

"The classic studies of games argue that play mirrors social life. But what kind of story must theory tell when society begins to resemble a game? This is the argument of Graeme Kirkpatrick's brilliant new book, Computer Games and the Social Imaginary. Drawing on recent social theory and an original analysis of the social role of aesthetics, Kirkpatrick makes a major contribution to our understanding of both games and society."
Andrew Feenberg, Simon Fraser University

"A rich and ambitious attempt to situate computer games relative to the transformation of capitalism over the last four decades. Kirkpatrick's thesis - which effortlessly combines sophisticated readings of the history of microcomputing and games with social and cultural theory - is nuanced, fresh and powerful. When I finished, I wanted to begin all over again."
Melanie Swalwell, Flinders University

"Kirkpatrick’s discussion of the social significance of computer games is very thought provoking, and provides a valuable inclusion to the field of media and game studies."
Christian Dewar, University of South Australia


Table of Contents
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Chapter one: Computer games in social theory
1. Gaming and the social imaginary
2. The gamer as a ‘streamlined self’
3. Social theory and critique
Chapter two: Lineages of the computer game
1. The revival of play
2. Technology and the dialectic of invention
3. Artistic critique and the transformation of computing
Chapter three: The formation of gaming culture
1. From games as technology to the discovery of ‘gameplay’
2. The ‘authentic’ gamer
3. Gaming’s constitutive ambivalence
Chapter four: Technology and power
1. Organising an industry
2. Globalisation and cultures of production
3. Technology, power and resistance
Chapter five: The phenakisticon
1. MMPGs in recognition-theoretic perspective
2. The limitations of engineered sociability
3. Gamification and the diminution of gameplay
Chapter six: Aesthetics and politics
1. The aesthetic dimension
2. Art, play and critique
3. Critical gaming?
Notes
References
Index

Computer Games and the Social Imaginary

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A Paperback / softback by Graeme Kirkpatrick

15 in stock


    View other formats and editions of Computer Games and the Social Imaginary by Graeme Kirkpatrick

    Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
    Publication Date: 06/09/2013
    ISBN13: 9780745641119, 978-0745641119
    ISBN10: 0745641113

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Computer games have fundamentally altered the relation of self and society in the digital age. Analysing topics such as technology and power, the formation of gaming culture and the subjective impact of play with computer games, this text will be of great interest to students and scholars of digital media, games studies and the information society.

    Trade Review
    "It is well researched, well argued, and one of the finest books to date on the subject of digital games."
    New Media and Society

    "The classic studies of games argue that play mirrors social life. But what kind of story must theory tell when society begins to resemble a game? This is the argument of Graeme Kirkpatrick's brilliant new book, Computer Games and the Social Imaginary. Drawing on recent social theory and an original analysis of the social role of aesthetics, Kirkpatrick makes a major contribution to our understanding of both games and society."
    Andrew Feenberg, Simon Fraser University

    "A rich and ambitious attempt to situate computer games relative to the transformation of capitalism over the last four decades. Kirkpatrick's thesis - which effortlessly combines sophisticated readings of the history of microcomputing and games with social and cultural theory - is nuanced, fresh and powerful. When I finished, I wanted to begin all over again."
    Melanie Swalwell, Flinders University

    "Kirkpatrick’s discussion of the social significance of computer games is very thought provoking, and provides a valuable inclusion to the field of media and game studies."
    Christian Dewar, University of South Australia


    Table of Contents
    Contents
    Acknowledgements
    Introduction
    Chapter one: Computer games in social theory
    1. Gaming and the social imaginary
    2. The gamer as a ‘streamlined self’
    3. Social theory and critique
    Chapter two: Lineages of the computer game
    1. The revival of play
    2. Technology and the dialectic of invention
    3. Artistic critique and the transformation of computing
    Chapter three: The formation of gaming culture
    1. From games as technology to the discovery of ‘gameplay’
    2. The ‘authentic’ gamer
    3. Gaming’s constitutive ambivalence
    Chapter four: Technology and power
    1. Organising an industry
    2. Globalisation and cultures of production
    3. Technology, power and resistance
    Chapter five: The phenakisticon
    1. MMPGs in recognition-theoretic perspective
    2. The limitations of engineered sociability
    3. Gamification and the diminution of gameplay
    Chapter six: Aesthetics and politics
    1. The aesthetic dimension
    2. Art, play and critique
    3. Critical gaming?
    Notes
    References
    Index

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