Little Jesuses and *@#?-off Robots

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Helen Kennedy

Seth Giddings

This essay draws on a number of recent research projects that record and analyze video game play. The 'microethnographic' approach that they develop suggests methodological strategies, both for analyzing gameplay and for identifying and conceptualizing relationships between technology, agency, and aesthetics in everyday technoculture across and between the virtual and the actual.

It suggests a new model of technoculture in everyday life, shifting analytical and critical attention away from established research objects and notions (the 'impact' of technologies, consumption, identities and subjectivity, interactivity) and toward the 'event' of gameplay as one with nonhuman as well as human participants, and brought into being by relationships, and translations, of human and nonhuman agency.


 Publication Details

This article appears as a chapter in Melanie Swalwell & Jason Wilson (eds) The Pleasures of Computer Gaming: essays on cultural history, theory and aesthetics, Jefferson NC: McFarland, pp.13-32.