Inter/vention : free play in the age of electracy /
Chiefly concerned with MMRPGs (Massively Multiplayer Role-Playing Games) and the communities that they give rise to.
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Main Author: | |
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Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Cambridge, Mass. :
MIT Press,
©2012.
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: |
Full text (Emmanuel users only) |
Summary: | Chiefly concerned with MMRPGs (Massively Multiplayer Role-Playing Games) and the communities that they give rise to. In today's complex digital world, we must understand new media expressions and digital experiences not simply as more technologically advanced forms of "writing" that can be understood and analyzed as "texts" but as artifacts in their own right that require a unique skill set. Just as agents seeking to express themselves in alphabetic writing need to be literate, "egents" who seek to express themselves in digital media need to be--to use a term coined by cybertheorist Gregory Ulmer--electrate. In Inter/vention, Jan Holmevik helps to invent electracy. He does so by tracing its path across the digital and rhetorical landscape--informatics, hacker heuretics, ethics, pedagogy, virtual space, and monumentality--and by introducing play as a new genre of electracy. Play, he argues, is the electrate ludic transversal. Holmevik contributes to the repertoire of electrate practices in order to understand and demonstrate how play invents electracy. Holmevik's argument straddles two divergences: in rhetoric, between how we study rhetoric as play and how we play rhetorically and in game studies, between ludology and narratology. Game studies has forged ludology practice by distinguishing it from literate practice (and often allying itself with the scientific tradition). Holmevik is able to link ludology and rhetoric through electracy. Play can and does facilitate invention: Play invented the field of ludology, Holmevik proposes a new heuretic in which play acts as a conductor for the invention of electracy. Play is a meta behavior that touches on every aspect of Ulmer's concept of electracy |
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Physical Description: | 1 online resource (xxiv, 204 pages) : illustrations |
Bibliography: | Includes bibliographical references (pages 169-181) and index. |
ISBN: | 9780262301657 0262301652 |
Source of Description, Etc. Note: | Print version record. |