Description

Book Synopsis

This book, the first multi-disciplinary study of nostalgia and videogame music, allows readers to understand the relationships and memories they often form around games, and music is central to this process. The quest into the past begins with this book, a map that leads to the intersection between nostalgia and videogame music.

Informed by research on musicology and memory as well as practices of gaming culture the edited volume discusses different forms of nostalgia, how video games display their relation to those and in what ways theoretically self-conscious positions can be found in games. The perspectives of the new discipline ludmusicology provide the broader framework for this project.

This significant new book focuses on an important topic that has not been sufficiently addressed in the field and is clear in its contribution to ludomusicology.

An important scholarly addition to the field of ludomusicology, with potential appeal to undergraduate and graduate scholars in many related fields due to its inherent interdisciplinarity, including musicology more broadly, game studies and games design, film studies, as well as cultural and media studies. It could also appeal to practitioners, particularly those nostalgic and self-reflexive artists who already engage in nostalgic practice (chiptune musicians, for instance). Also to those researching and studying in the fields of memory studies and cultural studies.

Readership will include researchers, educators, practitioners, undergraduate and graduate students, fans and game players.



Table of Contents

Dedication and Acknowledgments
Introduction Vincent E. Rone

PART 1: ARTICULATING NOSTALGIA AND VIDEOGAME MUSIC
1. A Player’s Guide to the Psychology of Nostalgia and Videogame Music – Michael Vitalino and Vincent E. Rone
2. And the Music Keeps on Playing: Nostalgia in Paraludical Videogame Music Consumption – Sebastian Diaz-Gasca

PART 2: OBJECTIFYING NOSTALGIA AND VIDEOGAME MUSIC
3. My Childhood Is in Your Hands: Videogame Concerts as Commodified and Tangible Nostalgic Experiences – Elizabeth Hunt
4. Remembering the Rules: Immersive Nostalgia in Final Fantasy Leitmotifs – Can Aksoy
5. The Sounds of 8-Bit Nostalgia: The Resurgence of Chiptune Music in Contemporary Film-Based Videogames –Jonathan Waxman

PART 3: SUBJECTIFYING NOSTALGIA AND VIDEOGAME MUSIC
6. A Link between Worlds: Nostalgia and Liminality in Musical Covers of The Legend of ZeldaAlec Nunes
7. You Unlock This Game with the Key of Imagination: The Twilight Zone: The Game (2014), Musical Parody, and the Sound of Nostalgia – Reba A. Wissner
8. “This Game Stinks”: Musical Parody and Nostalgia in EarthBoundJustin Sextro

PART 4: CONFRONTING NOSTALGIA AND VIDEOGAME MUSIC
9. Playing Music Videos: Three Case Studies of Interaction between Performing Videogames and Remembering Music Videos – Brent Ferguson and T. J. Laws-Nicola
10. Remembering Tomorrow: Music and Nostalgia in Fallout’s Retro-Future – Jessica Kizzire
11. Confronting Nostalgia for Racism in American Popular Music via BioShock InfiniteSarah Pozderac-Chenevey


Notes on Contributors
Index

Nostalgia and Videogame Music: A Primer of Case

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£81.00

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RRP £90.00 – you save £9.00 (10%)

Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Mon 19 Jan 2026.

A Hardback by Vincent E. Rone, Can Aksoy, Sarah Pozderac-Chenevey

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    View other formats and editions of Nostalgia and Videogame Music: A Primer of Case by Vincent E. Rone

    Publisher: Intellect Books
    Publication Date: 24/06/2022
    ISBN13: 9781789385519, 978-1789385519
    ISBN10: 1789385512

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    This book, the first multi-disciplinary study of nostalgia and videogame music, allows readers to understand the relationships and memories they often form around games, and music is central to this process. The quest into the past begins with this book, a map that leads to the intersection between nostalgia and videogame music.

    Informed by research on musicology and memory as well as practices of gaming culture the edited volume discusses different forms of nostalgia, how video games display their relation to those and in what ways theoretically self-conscious positions can be found in games. The perspectives of the new discipline ludmusicology provide the broader framework for this project.

    This significant new book focuses on an important topic that has not been sufficiently addressed in the field and is clear in its contribution to ludomusicology.

    An important scholarly addition to the field of ludomusicology, with potential appeal to undergraduate and graduate scholars in many related fields due to its inherent interdisciplinarity, including musicology more broadly, game studies and games design, film studies, as well as cultural and media studies. It could also appeal to practitioners, particularly those nostalgic and self-reflexive artists who already engage in nostalgic practice (chiptune musicians, for instance). Also to those researching and studying in the fields of memory studies and cultural studies.

    Readership will include researchers, educators, practitioners, undergraduate and graduate students, fans and game players.



    Table of Contents

    Dedication and Acknowledgments
    Introduction Vincent E. Rone

    PART 1: ARTICULATING NOSTALGIA AND VIDEOGAME MUSIC
    1. A Player’s Guide to the Psychology of Nostalgia and Videogame Music – Michael Vitalino and Vincent E. Rone
    2. And the Music Keeps on Playing: Nostalgia in Paraludical Videogame Music Consumption – Sebastian Diaz-Gasca

    PART 2: OBJECTIFYING NOSTALGIA AND VIDEOGAME MUSIC
    3. My Childhood Is in Your Hands: Videogame Concerts as Commodified and Tangible Nostalgic Experiences – Elizabeth Hunt
    4. Remembering the Rules: Immersive Nostalgia in Final Fantasy Leitmotifs – Can Aksoy
    5. The Sounds of 8-Bit Nostalgia: The Resurgence of Chiptune Music in Contemporary Film-Based Videogames –Jonathan Waxman

    PART 3: SUBJECTIFYING NOSTALGIA AND VIDEOGAME MUSIC
    6. A Link between Worlds: Nostalgia and Liminality in Musical Covers of The Legend of ZeldaAlec Nunes
    7. You Unlock This Game with the Key of Imagination: The Twilight Zone: The Game (2014), Musical Parody, and the Sound of Nostalgia – Reba A. Wissner
    8. “This Game Stinks”: Musical Parody and Nostalgia in EarthBoundJustin Sextro

    PART 4: CONFRONTING NOSTALGIA AND VIDEOGAME MUSIC
    9. Playing Music Videos: Three Case Studies of Interaction between Performing Videogames and Remembering Music Videos – Brent Ferguson and T. J. Laws-Nicola
    10. Remembering Tomorrow: Music and Nostalgia in Fallout’s Retro-Future – Jessica Kizzire
    11. Confronting Nostalgia for Racism in American Popular Music via BioShock InfiniteSarah Pozderac-Chenevey


    Notes on Contributors
    Index

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